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Forensics of Hair Analysis
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Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Forensics of Hair Analysis

Page 2: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Objectives

• After studying this chapter you should be able to:• Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas of hair • List the three phases of hair growth • Appreciate the distinction between animal and human hairs • List hair features that are useful for the microscopic comparison of

human hairs • Explain the proper collection of forensic hair evidence • Describe and understand the role of DNA typing in hair comparisons • Understand the differences between natural and manufactured fibers • List the properties of fibers that are most useful for forensic

comparisons

• Describe the proper collection of fiber evidence

Page 3: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Forensics

• One of the most common is hair evidence.• helpful in demonstrating physical contact with a

suspect • Until recently, the comparison microscope was

considered the only reliable tool for the identification and comparison of the microscopic characteristics found in hair

• Today, nuclear and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) testing can provide additional information that can influence the value of microscopic examinations

Page 4: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Basic Hair Structure

Page 5: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Facts

• A hair grows from the papilla and with the exception of that point of generation is made up of dead, cornified cells

• It consists of a shaft that projects above the skin, and a root that is imbedded in the skin

Page 6: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair

• Its basic components are keratin (a protein), melanin (a pigment), and trace quantities of metallic elements.

• These elements are deposited in the hair during its growth and/or absorbed by the hair from an external environment.

• After a period of growth, the hair remains in the follicle in a resting stage to eventually be sloughed from the body.

Page 7: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Cuticle

•The cuticle is a translucent outer layer of the hair shaft consisting of scales that cover the shaft. Cuticular scales always point from the proximal or root end of the hair to the distal or tip end of the hair.

Page 8: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Cuticle

• There are three basic scale structures that make up the cuticle—coronal (crown-like), spinous (petal-like), and imbricate (flattened).

• Combinations and variations of these types are possible.

Page 9: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Bat Hair and Mink Hair

Page 10: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Human Hair

• The imbricate or flattened scales type consists of overlapping scales with narrow margins.

• They are commonly found in human hairs and many animal hairs.

Page 11: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Medulla

• The medulla is a central core of cells that may be present in the hair.

Human

Animal

Deer

Page 12: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Medulla

• The medulla, when present in human hairs, is generally less than one-third the overall diameter of the hair shaft.

• The medulla in animal hairs is normally continuous and structured and generally occupies an area of greater than one-third the overall diameter of the hair shaft.

• There are many more characteristics of hair that are too numerous to discuss for the purpose of this lab

Page 13: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Animal Versus Human Hairs

Human hairs are generally consistent in color and pigmentation throughout the length of the hair shaft, whereas animal hairs may exhibit radical color changes in a short distance, called banding.

• The pigmentation of human hairs is evenly distributed, or slightly more dense toward the cuticle, whereas the pigmentation of animal hairs is more centrally distributed, although more dense toward the medulla.

Page 14: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Forensics• Hairs found on a knife or club may support a murder and/or assault

weapon claim.• A questioned hair specimen can be compared microscopically with

hairs from a known individual, side-by-side.

• Human hairs can be classified by racial origin such as Caucasian (European origin), African-American (African origin), and Mongoloid (Asian origin).

• In some instances, the racial characteristics exhibited are not clearly defined, indicating the hair may be of mixed-racial origin.

Page 15: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Forensics

• The region of the body where a hair originated can be determined with considerable accuracy by its gross appearance and microscopic characteristics.

• The length and color can be determined.• It can also be determined whether the hair was

forcibly removed, damaged by burning or crushing, or artificially treated by dyeing or bleaching.

Page 16: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Forensics: DNA

• Often it is not possible to extract DNA fully, or there is not enough tissue present to conduct an examination.

• Hairs with large roots and tissue are promising sources of nuclear DNA. However, DNA examinations destroy hairs, eliminating the possibility of further microscopic examination.

Page 17: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Forensics: Collection

• Hairs can be recovered from items using a number of different techniques.

• Some of the methods used to collect hairs from clothing and bedding items are scraping, shaking, taping, and picking.

• Debris from large carpeted surfaces might be vacuumed into a filtered canister.

• If the specific location of a hair on a clothing item is important, it might be necessary to pick off the hair or tape the item and record where the hair was removed.

Page 18: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Hair Forensics: Which Hairs?

• Head hairs and pubic hairs exhibit a greater range of microscopic characteristics than other human hairs; therefore, head and pubic hairs are routinely forensically compared.

• Twenty-five randomly selected head hairs are generally considered adequate to represent the range of hair characteristics of that individual.

• It is recommended that the same number of hairs be collected from the pubic region.

Page 19: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Forensic Identification

• Human hairs can generally be identified by racial origin, body area, and other comparison characteristics.

• Racial indicators apply primarily to head hairs.

Page 20: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

•Caucasian

• African-American

• Mongoloid

Page 21: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Where is this hair from?

• Certain features of individual hairs identify the region of the body where it originated. Pubic Hair

Page 22: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Where is this Hair from?

Limb

Page 23: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Where is this hair from?

Beard

Page 24: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

There are also certain characteristics for

• Underarm hair

• Chest hair

• Eyebrow

• General body hair

Page 25: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Things to consider when viewing hair

• Length: Length is considered, although hairs may have been cut between the time of deposition of the questioned specimen and the collection of a known sample. In addition, there may be a significant difference in the lengths of the shortest and longest hairs on an individual's head.

Tip: The tip can be cut, broken, split, abraded (rounded), or finely pointed as illustrated by An individual's grooming, hygiene, health, and nutrition can affect these features.

Page 26: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

• Glass-Cut or Broken Hair Tip

• Cut Hair Tip

• Worn Razor-Cut Tip

Page 27: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

Dyed hairs possess an unnatural cast or color. In addition, the cuticle

will take on the color of the dye

Page 28: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

• Scissor Cut

• Razor Cut

• Broken Hair

• Burned Hair

Page 29: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.

What is this?

LICE

Page 30: Forensics of Hair Analysis. Objectives After studying this chapter you should be able to: Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex, and medulla areas.