Crime Scene Basics
Blood Basics
Blood Spatter
Fingerprinting
DNA
Hair and Fibers
100

The person associated with someone suspected of committing a crime

What is an accomplice?


100

The most abundant cells in our blood that carry oxygen & contain hemoglobin

What are red blood cells?

100

Blood stains created from the application of force to the area where the blood originated 

What is Spatter?

100

The three specific classes for all fingerprints based upon their visual pattern.

What are Arches, loops and whorls?

100

This is stored in our DNA, specifically within our chromosomes. 

What is genetic information?


100

Hair is composed of this protein, which is also a primary component of finger and toe nails

What is Keratin?

200

Statement of where a suspect was at the time of a crime

What is an alibi?

200

The yellowish liquid portion of blood that contains electrolytes, nutrients and vitamins, hormones, proteins, and antibodies. 

What is plasma?

200

Small drops of blood that break off from the parent spatter when the blood droplet hits a surface

What are satellite spatters?

200

The most common class of fingerprints

What are loops?

200

This is what DNA stands for 

What is Deoxyribonucleic Acid?

200

The three principal parts that hair is composed of. 

What are the Cuticle, Medulla, and Cortex?
300

This type of evidence can be analyzed to give clues to the location of a crime, movement of victim, and type of weapon. 


What is Blood Spatter?

300

The clotting factors that are carried in plasma, they clot together to seal a wound and prevent loss of blood. 

What are Platelets?


300

The droplet from where a satellite spatter originates 

What is a parent drop?

300

These patterns are named for their positions related to the radius and ulna bone. 

What are radial and ulnar loops?

300

Nitrogen Bases that form the middle of a DNA molecule 

What are Nucleotides?
300

Chemical compounds that reflect certain wavelengths of visible light to create hair color. 

What are pigments?

400

Shoeprints, tool marks, tire tracks, bite marks, and marks on a fired bullet are several examples of this kind of evidence. 

What is Impression Evidence?

400

Proteins that exist on the surface of all of your red blood cells

What are Agglutinogens?


400

Tests used to detect blood at crime scenes based upon the properties of hemoglobin in the blood

What are Blood Reagant Tests?

400

The most rare class of fingerprint. 

What are arches?

400

An electronic database of DNA profiles that can identify suspects. 

What is COmbined DNA Index System (CODIS)?
400

Central core of hair that may be absent in some people. 

What is the medulla?

500

In order to test hair evidence for nuclear DNA, this must be present. 


What is The Root!

500

This blood type is the Universal Donor, because it can give to any blood type

What is Type O?

500
Bloodstain patterns created from the force of gravity

What are passive bloodstains?


500

When a print has more than two deltas, it is most likely this kind of print. 

What is an Accidental Whorl?

500

Thymine pairs with this nucleotide. 

What is Adenine?

500

The most important component in determining from which individual a human hair may have come

What is the cortex?

600

This principle states that "with contact between two items, there will be an exchange," first recognized by Edmund Locard. 

What is Locard's Exchange Principle?

600

The process of clotting thrombocytes to seal a wound and prevent loss of blood

What is Coagulation?


600

Patterns that occur when a force is applied to the source of the blood 

What are projected bloodstains. 

600

Another word for fingerprints.

What is a Dactylogram?

600

Adenine pairs with Thymine, just like these two nucleotides pair together. 

What is Cytosine and Guanine?

600

This part of the hair structure contains pigment

What is the cortex?

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