Forensics Basics
Time of Death
DNA Genetics
Blood and Evidence
Fingerprints and Lab Work
100

A lie detector test is also known as

What is a polygraph

100

Stiffing of muscles after death

What is rigor mortis?

100

What can a bloodstain pattern analysis determine?

What is tell us the "how" of a crime?

100

Blood type known as universal recipient

What is AB+?

100

Can a fingerprint exclude a suspect?

What is yes?

200

This branch of forensic science studies insects to solve crimes

What is forensic entomology?

200

Settling of blood after death

What is livor mortis (lividity/blood pooling)?

200

Charge of DNA if it moves toward a positive end

What is negative?

200

Blood type as universal donor

What is O-?

200

Can a fingerprint help identify a suspect?

What is yes?

300

Evidence that includes witness statements or testimony

What is testimonial evidence?

300

Cooling of the body used to estimate time of death

What is algor mortis?

300

Percentage of DNA shared by all humans

What is 99%?

300

Blood stain analysis can determine this

What is direction/angle of impact?

300

Fingerprints are considered this type of evidence

What is physical evidence?

400

The least reliable type of evidence often influenced by bias or memory

What is eyewitness testimony?

400

Tool and location used to take body temperature to determine time of death

What is thermometer in the liver

400

What is the name of the process that separates segments of DNA?

What is gel electrophoresis?

400

Something bloodstain analysis cannot determine

Who the blood belongs to (without DNA)?

400

What three abnormalities do autopsies generally test for?

What are injury, disease, and toxins?

500

DNA evidence alone is not enough- why is additional evidence is needed

What is to support/corroborate findings?

500

Why AB+ blood type known as the “universal recipient”?

What is, it has both A and B antigens, but no antibodies?

  

500

What are the steps of the Crime Scene Protocol?

What is interview, examine, document, and process?

500

List the correct terminology to describe the stages of impact found in blood stain pattern analysis?

What is contact, displacement, dispersion, retraction?

  

500

What are the 3 test used to detect presence of blood at a crime scene?


What is KM, Hemoglobin, and Luminol?

  

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