The lines on a fingerprint.
What are ridges?
The area that a crime has taken place that is not the first scene.
What is a secondary crime scene?
The study of projectiles in motion.
What is ballistics?
The central section of hair.
What is the medulla.
The four different blood groups are AB, B, AB and...?
What is O?
A plain and tented fingerprint that has no delta.
What is an arch?
The process of recording who had the evidence at any given moment.
What is the Chain of Custody?
What is gunshot residue?
The outer section of hair.
What is the cortex?
The least common blood group.
What is AB?
A loop that opens towards the thumb or radius bone on the right hand.
What is an Ulnar loop?
The person responsible for the managing the crime scene.
Who is the SOCO.
What is wound ballistics?
The fibre type that appears smooth under the microscope.
What is synthetic?
Can help determine the time of attack.
What is blood pooling.
The 2 glands in skin.
What are sweat glands and sebaceous glands?
A claim that someone was elsewhere when a crime took place.
What is an alibi?
The three areas of ballistics are Interior, Exterior and...?
What is terminal?
This part of the hair needs to be present in order to find DNA.
What is the root?
A blood drop that is a perfect circle represents a person that is.
What is not moving?
The culture with the earliest records of fingerprinting.
What is China.
The person who proposed the exchange principle.
Who is Edmond Locard.
The study of projectiles in flight (after the barrel)
What is exterior?
An animal with no medulla.
What is the polar bear?
Blood that is a fine mist would represent this.
What is point blank gunshot?