BLOOD
PRINTS
CHROMATOGRAPHY
FIRE SCIENCE
100

What type of evidence is blood: class, individual, or both?

What is both?

100

What is the most common fingerprint type?

What is loop

100

This technique separates components of a mixture based on how they move through a medium.

What is chromatography?

100

The three components that make a fire.

What are heat, fuel, and oxygen?

200

What part of the blood carries oxygen?

What are red blood cells?

200

Areas where fingerprint ridges converge/diverge? 

What are deltas?

200

The phase that remains still during chromatography.

What is the stationary phase?

200

This type of residue may indicate use of gasoline or lighter fluid.

What is an accelerant residue?

300

What blood type SPECIFICALLY is the universal donor?

What is O-?

300
What are the three fingerprint types?

What is arch, loop, and whorl?

300

The phase that moves in chomatography.

What is the mobile phase?

300

This pattern can show where a fire started and spread.

What is a burn pattern?

400

What determines your blood type (positive or negative)?

What is Rhesus factor?

400

Ulnar or radial loop flows toward the thumb?

What is radial?

400

The reason different substances travel different distances in paper chromatography.

What is differing solubility and affinity to the stationary phase?

400

A material that ignites easily and helps spread fire unnaturally fast.

What is an accelerant?

500

If mother is AB+ and father is A-, what blood types can their children have? (List 4).

What is AB+, AB-, A+, and A-?

500

What are some of the easiest places/surfaces to identify fingerprints?

What is smooth, nontextured surfaces? (Glass, polished wood, some type of metal)

500

The ratio used to compare how far a substance traveled versus the solvent.

What is the Rf value?

500

The systematic process of elimination to find the cause.

What is the scientific method?