Foundations of Forensics
Crime Scene Investigation
Evidence and Chain of Custody
Fingerprints and Identification
Hair and Fiber Analysis
100

This field applies scientific methods to matters involving crime and the legal system.

Forensic Science

100

This is any location where evidence related to a crime may be found.

Crime Scene

100

This type of evidence can be directly linked to a single, unique source.

individual evidence

100

This fingerprint pattern is the most common among the population.


Bonus for 200: What percent of the population have this?

Loop 

60/65%

100

This hair structure provides color and shape to hair.

Cortex

200

This forensic professional analyzes evidence in a laboratory but does not arrest suspects.

Forensic Scientist/Criminalist

200

This is the first priority of the responding officer upon arrival at a crime scene.

Preserving life

200

Fibers, bloodstains, and soil are examples of this broad category of evidence.

Physical evidence

200

This type of fingerprint cannot be seen without special processing.

Latent print

200

This part of the hair shaft may be continuous, fragmented, or absent.

Medulla

300

This principle explains why materials are transferred whenever two objects or people come into contact.

Locard’s Principle of Exchange

300

Blocking off areas and limiting access helps prevent this problem with evidence.

Contamination

300

This written record tracks who handled evidence and when.

Chain of custody

300

These tiny ridge details are used to individualize fingerprints.

Ridge Characteristics/Minutiae

300

Cotton fibers are classified as this type of fiber.

Natural plant fibers

400

This early identification method relied on body measurements and was later replaced by fingerprinting.

Anthropometry (Bertillon system)

400

This step documents the scene using photos, sketches, and notes before evidence is collected.

Crime scene documentation

400

This kind of evidence narrows a group but cannot identify one specific individual.

Class evidence

400

This computerized system stores and compares fingerprint records nationwide.

AFIS (or IAFIS)

400

Rayon and nylon fall into this fiber category.

Synthetic (man-made) fibers

500

This Supreme Court case requires judges to evaluate the reliability of scientific evidence before it is presented in court.

Daubert v. Merrell Dow

500

This process reconstructs the sequence of events using physical evidence and observations.

Crime scene reconstruction

500

Improper packaging or documentation most directly threatens this requirement in court.

Evidence admissibility

500

Attempts to destroy fingerprints usually fail because these skin features regenerate.

Friction ridge patterns

500

DNA evidence from hair is most useful when this structure is present.

Root

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