Hair and Fibers
Fire Science
Reaction Chemistry
Fingerprints
Applied Forensics
100

Name the structural regions of a hair shaft 

Cuticle, Cortex, Medulla

100

List the three elements of the fire triangle.

Heat, Fuel, and Oxygen

100

In the Fire Science Lab, what gas was produced by baking soda and vinegar that smothered the flame?

Carbon Dioxide (CO₂)

100

List the three major fingerprint patterns.

Arches, Loops, and Whorls

100

What portion of a hair is examined to determine medullary pattern?

The Medulla

200

Which layer of hair contains pigment granules that give hair its color?

Cortex

200

Define an accelerant.

A chemical that speeds up the rate of combustion

200

What gas did the yeast and hydrogen peroxide reaction release that extended the flame?

Oxygen (O₂)

200

What term describes a print made by natural oils and perspiration that is invisible to the eye?

Latent print

200

Why is fire chemistry important in arson investigation?

It explains how combustion and oxidation create burn patterns used to determine cause

300

How can investigators distinguish animal hair from human hair microscopically?

By comparing the medullary index and scale pattern

300

Why do fire investigators collect samples in airtight metal paint cans?

To preserve volatile vapors from evaporating before analysis

300

Explain how CO₂ and O₂ each affect fire behavior.

CO₂ removes oxygen and suppresses fire; O₂ feeds and intensifies fire

300

Which chemical method is used to develop latent prints on non-porous surfaces like glass?

Superglue Fuming

300

What gas must be present for a fire to burn?

Oxygen

400

Why is hair usually classified as class evidence?

Because it cannot identify a specific person without a follicle containing DNA

400

Explain the role of oxygen in the combustion process.

Oxygen supports oxidation reactions that release heat and light

400

What does the Fire Triangle demonstrate about controlling or preventing fires?

Removing any one component (heat, fuel, oxygen) will stop combustion

400

What is the purpose of AFIS?

To compare and match fingerprints nationally

400

Why is Locard’s Exchange Principle important in fire or trace evidence cases?

Because materials transfer between a person and a scene

500

Describe one microscopic difference between natural and synthetic fibers.

Natural fibers show irregular surfaces and scales; synthetic fibers are smooth with uniform diameter

500

Give two clues at a fire scene that might indicate arson.

Multiple points of origin, irregular burn patterns, or presence of accelerants

500

In forensic investigation, why is understanding chemical reaction rates important for analyzing a fire scene?

It helps determine how quickly a fire spread and whether accelerants were used

500

What does AFIS stand for?

Automated Fingerprint Identification System

500

Describe one way hair, fiber, and fingerprint evidence can work together to link a suspect to a crime scene.

Each type of evidence supports the others through class and individual identification to strengthen association