High School Fingerprint Analysis

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We touch things every day: a coffee cup, a car door, a computer keyboard. Each time we do, it is likely that we leave behind our unique signature—in our fingerprints.
No two people have exactly the same fingerprints. Even identical twins, with identical DNA, have different fingerprints. This uniqueness allows fingerprints to be used in all sorts of ways, including for background checks, biometric security, mass disaster identification, and of course, in criminal situations. Fingerprint analysis has been used to identify suspects and solve crimes for more than 100 years, and it remains an extremely valuable tool for law enforcement. One of the most important uses for fingerprints is to help investigators link one crime scene to another involving …show more content…

In light of the fact that fingerprinting has become a practice in schools as well as in other institutions, it serves to generate students interest. Students are intrigued by the process and the content. There are three main types of fingerprints: visible prints, latent prints and impressed prints. 
Visible prints are made by blood, grease, ink, or dirt. This type of fingerprint is easily visible to the human eye. Latent prints are not visible to the naked eye. They are formed from the sweat from sebaceous gland on the body or water, salt, amino acids and oils contained in sweat. Impressed prints are also called plastic prints that are indentations left in soft pliable surfaces, such as clay, wax, paint or another surface that will take the impression. They are visible to the naked …show more content…

There are four groups of whorls: plain (concentric circles), central pocket loop (a loop with a whorl at the end), double loop (two loops that create an S-‐like pattern) and accidental loop (irregular shaped). Whorls make up about 35 percent of pattern types.
Arches -‐ create a wave-‐like pattern and include plain arches and tented arches. Tented arches rise to a sharper point than plain arches. Arches make up about five percent of all pattern types.
What is fingerprinting? Fingerprinting is the act of taking impressions of a person's fingerprints to be used for identification purposes. Usually done at the time of entering the jail house, the fingerprinting is completed and attached to a permanent file that accompanies the individual through the criminal justice system. Originally accomplished by rolling a finger in ink and transferring the ink to a fingerprint card, the modern method uses a computer to scan the images of the fingerprints. With this method, the fingerprinting is completed without the mess of the traditional inking system.
What do fingerprints tell us about

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