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Uncover the world of trace evidence through the history of microscopes, magnification techniques, and intricate details of hair structure. Delve into forensic investigation methods and terminology to enhance your understanding of this intriguing science.
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Trace Evidence Review • Trace Evidence – refers to • minute (tiny) physical evidence • that may be transferred • between a perpetrator to a victim • or to and from the crime scene LEP!! B. The case of the gold coin counterfeiters! • Coins were being made illegally from brass alloys • Three suspects were caught • Each had tiny shavings of metal in coat pockets • Prisoner’s Dilemma!
Trace Evidence Review • Types of Trace Evidence • Hair - animal or human • Fibers - textile products (sheets, rugs, clothing) • Soil • Botanicals - assorted plant parts including pollen • Glass – assorted sources • Paint – car in particular • Other – bits and fragments of materials
The Microscope – History • Historical notes • 1590’s - Zacharias Janssen • Dutch • Built first simple microscope • Actually jailed at one point for counterfeiting • 1670’s - Anton Van Leeuwenhoek • Dutch • Father of Microbiology • improved the construction of the simple microscope • magnification increased to 270x !!!
The Microscope – History • Historical notes • 1660’s - Robert Hooke • English • built first compound light microscope • Drew huge numbers of organisms using it! • 1920’s – Colonel Calvin Goddard • American • developed comparison microscope • Used extensively in bullet comparisons and firearm identification
E. Microscope terminology Magnification • to make an object appear bigger than it is • Use of the ocular and objective lenses gives total magnification • total magnification = ocular x objective • low = 10 x 10 = 100 x • high = 10 x 40 = 400 x Resolution • the clarity of an image or; • the ability to distinguish between two objects very close together Field of view (FOV) • what you actually see in the ocular • inverse relationship between magnification and FOV • as magnification increases, FOV decreases • Size of FOV allow us to determine size of objects
F. Measurements Under the Microscope • Units of measure under the microscope • the micron (u) • 1,000 microns = 1 millimeter • Therefore, 500 microns = ?? ________ • And 2,000 microns = ?? _________ • The FOV allows us to determine relative size under the microscope • Example • In the ocular… a hair of unknown width • But we know the width of the FOV is 1,000 microns • The hair covers half the FOV • What is the width of the hair?
F. Measurements Under the Microscope • What is the width of the hair if the hair covers 1/5 of the FOV (FOV = 800 u)? • What is the size of a hair if the hair covers 1/6 of the FOV (FOV = 240 u)? • In question 2, if the magnification shown is high power (400x), what is the FOV under low power (100x)?
G. Types of Microscopes Standard Compound Light Microscope • typical “biological” scope • used for • Hair, fibers • Blood and tissue • medium magnification (40x – 1,000x)
G. Other Types of Microscopes • Stereomicroscope • “workhorse” of crime lab • Two eye pieces provides 3-D image • used to view most evidence as a preliminary check • low magnification (10x - 60x) • Polarized Light Microscope • uses polarizing light filters (glorified ray bans) • shows birefringence - double bending of light • used in examining soil, synthetic fibers, and glass • medium magnification (40x – 1,000x)
G. Other Types of Microscopes • Comparison Microscope • one ocular but double objective lenses • allow two objects to be compared and matched in one FOV • especially useful in firearms analysis • low to medium magnification (10x – 1000x) 5. Electron Microscope • uses a beam of electrons instead of a beam of light • detectors in device produce an image • magnification up to 100,000x
H. Hair Evidence Hair • Function • an appendage for maintaining warmth • Found on various body parts • Structure • Composed of a material called keratin • Cuticle • a protective outer coating • composed of units called scales • Medulla • an inner air space • may be filled with cells • Cortex • composed of microfibers (very thin protein tubes) • surrounded by protein • Trivia – the curlier the hair, the more sulfur bonds in it
Dog Mouse Cat Other Notes on Hair Structure • Cuticle • Different species have different scale patterns • Medulla • an inner air space, may be filled with cells • Four forms of medulla • Trace • Continuous • Discontinuous • Absent
Other Notes on Hair Structure • Hair Growth • Anagenic phase • growing phase of hair • Hair grows 1 mm per day on average • A history of your drug use!!! • Pulled hair looks ragged • Shows signs of struggle • Telogenic phase • The dormant phase • Hair can easily be pulled out at this point • Root is club shaped in humans
Hmm, I wonder what will happen if I just take one quick peek at my neighbor’s test in Foley’s class? Other Notes on Hair Structure • Hair Death • Hair continues to grow after death • Hair highly resistant to decomposition • Acids and bases have little effect • But bleaches will destroy hair and give you a bad hair day!
Hair as Evidence • What hair can tell us about a suspect • Their hair characteristics • Color, length, width • Spatial configuration • Straight • Curly • Kinky • Cosmetic treatments (dyed, bleached, natural, damaged) • Signs of struggle (anagenic hair with parts of follicle)
Hair as Evidence • Possible things learned from hair • Sex (based on length) • Age (greying of hair) • Occupation (what is on the hair, plaster, sawdust, other chemicals) • Drug use (1 inch hair gives you 25 days of drug use)
Hair as Evidence What hair can’t tell us about a suspect Hair cannot tell us who someone is not individualizing Exception – DNA in root
A fiber is the smallest unit of a textile material. Examples: • Clothing • Rugs • Curtains • Fibers can be • Natural fibers • Animal, vegetable, or mineral fibers • Derived fibers • Less used, cheaper plant materials turned into a more useful • Technically man-made fibers like Rayon • Synthetic fibers • Chemically made fibers • as man-made fibers such as nylon
Natural Fibers: Animal fibers • Wool • sheep hair spun into fibers and used in many textile products • Has all the characteristics of a hair (medulla, cuticle, etc) • Felt • pressed rabbit or cow hairs produce a material that is soft and pliable • Natural felt has all the characteristics of a hair (medulla, cuticle, etc) • Silk • The thin fibers produced by silkworms • Extremely strong for its thickness
Natural Fibers: Plant or vegetable fibers • Cotton • Seed head fibers (think dandelion) used in many textile products • Has flattened, twisted look to it • Linen • A stem fiber used in table clothes and other textiles • Has a bamboo look to its fibers • Hemp • A rougher stem fiber • Used in making natural rope and other tough cloth items
Natural Fibers: Mineral fibers • Asbestos • A fibrous material used for its heat insulating properties • Some forms highly carcinogenic (cancer causing) • Very spikey looking in photo
Derived Fibers • Man-made fibers derived from natural materials • Classified as semi-synthetic • Fibers made from other substances normally not used as fibers • Example: cellulose in Rayon socks • Cellulose is pulverized • Then extruded like PlayDoh into fibers
Synthetic fibers • Completely man-made, chemical fibers • All are polymers • substances composed of chains of smaller individual units • Nylon • thermoplastic,silky material • First used in making parachutes and nylon stocking in World War II • Strong, though original forms could tear • Ripstop nylon – will not tear completely • Dacron • PETE (Polyethylene terephthalate) • Also used in making beverage and other food containers • Polyester – another common synthetic fiber • Fiberglass – high insulating factor
How long do fibers persist? • Most fiber evidence is lost (fall off) a short • time after the transfer occurs. • The fibers that do remain will be persistent. • But most fibers, up to 80%, lost in first 24 hours