The Evolution of Fingerprinting
Amanda Hurtado, Katherine McGowan,
Blanca Muñoz
ANCIENT HISTORY OF FINGERPRINTING2000 BC
Fingerprints were used for business transactions in Babylon.
221-206 BC
China had records about using hand prints as evidence during investigation.
221 BC- 220 AD
Fingerprints were used on clay seals to “sign” documents.
14th Century
Official government documents contained fingerprint impressions.
NEHEMIAH GREW/ MARCELLO MALPIGHI
English botanist, physician and microscopist
1684: Published Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London vol. 14, pp. 566-567 (1684).
First person to study and describe ridges, furrows, and pores on hand and foot surfaces.
Italian physiologist
1687: Published Concerning the External Tactile Organs
Noted that ridged skin increases friction between an object and the skin’s surface which enhances traction for walking and grasping
friction ridge skin observations
ANDREAS MAYER 1788 – German anatomist Johann
Christoph Andreas Mayer is the first to write that friction ridge skin is unique.
Book: Anatomical Copper-plates with Appropriate Explanations,
Mayer wrote, “Although the arrangement of skin ridges is never duplicated in two persons, nevertheless the similarities are closer among some individuals. In others the differences are marked, yet in spite of their peculiarities of arrangement all have a certain likeness”
JOHANNES E. PURKINJE 1823 Evangelist published
article on nine fingerprint patterns 1832
Did not receive credit due to not applying his method to anything useful (although others did piggy-back on his ideas)
Was known mostly for studying cells
PATTERNS OF FINGERPRINTS
WILLIAM HERSCHEL 1858 After Indian Mutiny of
1858, became member of Indian Civil Service
Contract with fickle employer made him put handprint on contract
Used prints on family prints did not change over time
Published worked in England’s “Nature” magazine that prints are consistent
HENRY FAULDS (1880) British surgeon and
Superintendent of Tsukiji Hospital in Tokyo.
Wrote an article that discussed fingerprints as a means of identification.
Began to study “skin-furrows”.
Developed a classification system for recording impressions.
He is credited with the first fingerprint identification.
GILBERT THOMPSON 1882 First (known) use of
fingerprints for legal purposes in the US
Engineer working for US Geological Survey working on railroads in Mexico 1882
Pressed thumb print on “chit wages” to prevent forgeries
(caught a “lying Bob” and
made him pay $75)
ALPHONSE BERTILLION Alphonse Bertillon, a
Clerk in the Prefecture of Police of at Paris, France
System of classification: Anthropometry- First method of classification also known as the Bertillon System
This method laid ground work for acceptance of fingerprints as scientific method.
FRANCES GALTON 1888 Studied prints to see
patterns in prints and genealogy
Did calculations on statistics of fingerprint similarities
Identified characteristics of fingerprints in his article “Fingerprints” 1892
JUAN VUCETICH (1892) Statistician at the Central
Police Department in La Plata, Argentina. He was later promoted to Anthropometric Identification.
Kept the first fingerprint files based on Galton’s details.
Made the first criminal fingerprint identification
SIR EDWARD RICHARD HENRY (1896)
Inspector General of Police for the Lower Provinces in Bengal.
Went before an inquiry committee to convince them to change to fingerprinting criminals instead of using the Bertillon Method.
Published the book The Classification and Use of Fingerprints.
FINGERPRINTS IN CRIMEWilliam West
Case (1903) Rojas Case
(1892)
FINGERPRINTS IN POP CULTURE Mark Twain’s Life of the
Mississippi 1883 used fingerprint ID to catch the antagonist.
Alfred Hitchcock used fingerprints in M is for Murder by having one character trick another into leaving a visible print on a letter
Adventure of the Norwood Builder, a Sherlock Holmes novel by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle used fingerprints as a significant clue at a turning point in the novel. Ballistics and tool marks were also brought to the public in his series
EDMOND LOCARD
Developed the science of poroscopy, the study of fingerprint pores and the impressions produced by these pores.
Established the first rules of the minimum number of minutiae necessary for identification
He said that if 12 specific points were identical between two fingerprints, it would be sufficient for positive identification.
DAVID ASHBAUGH Sergeant and forensic
identification specialist in Canada. Specialized in ridgeology.
Noted fingerprint individuality
Remain unchanged except for scars
Patterns and details are unique; ridge patterns vary within
AUTOMATED FINGERPRINT IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM (AFIS)
Replace intensive processes of classifying, searching, and matching ten print cards used for personal identification
Database search for 10 pt. set of prints
1963 Special Agent Carl Voelker: FBI’s fingerprint identification process.
1975-1976: System called Finder was delivered to the FBI.
SUMMARY
China- Business Transactions
Bertillon’s Method
Fingerprint Cards
(AFIS) Computer Databases
WORK CITED Ashbaugh, David R. Ridgeology Modern Evaluative Friction Ridge Identification. Canada, 1999. eBook file.
Barnes, Jeffery G. "History." Fingerprint Source Book. Maryland, 2010. 3-18. PDF file.
Crime Scene Forensics. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://www.crimescene-forensics.com/ History_of_Fingerprints.html>
Ferguson, C. E., B. E. Turvey, and W. A. Petherick. "Edmond Locard." Forensic Science Central. Elsevier Academic, 2010. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://forensicsciencecentral.co.uk/edmondlocard.shtml>.
Fingerprint Evidence. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://www.finger-prints.com/>.
Gale, Thomson, ed. "Ashbaugh, David Robinson." Encyclopedia.com. HighBeam™ Research, 2014. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3448300042.html>.
Galton, Francis. Finger Prints. London: MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK, 1892. N. pag. Digital file.
Herschel, William J. The Origin of Finger-Printing. London: OXFORD UP, 1916. N. pag. eBook file.
Higgins, Peter, et al. "Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS)." Fingerprint Source Book. By Kenneth R. Moses. Maryland, 2010. 3-33.PDF file.
History of Forensic Psychology. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://forensicpsych.umwblogs.org/research/criminaljustice/fingerprint-
analysis/>.
Reachinformation. Reach Information, 2009. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://www.healthcare.reachinformation.com/Nehemiah_Grew.aspx>.
The History of Fingerprints. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Jan. 2014. <http://onin.com/fp/ fphistory.html>.
QUESTIONS