Hair and Fur as Evidence

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Evidence large or even small, is still crucial to any investigation. Most of the time evidence can be so small that it can’t necessarily been seen to the human naked eye. Through various techniques of visualization, collection and preservation, hair and fur evidence has made its debut in the forensic science world and in court rooms.
Human hair and fur from animals have a lot of similar and yet different characteristics. For instance human hair is normally consistent in color and pigmentation throughout the length of the hair shaft. The color and pigmentation is evenly distributed or slightly denser toward the cuticle. The human hair grows out of a tube like structure called a hair follicle. Human hair is also primarily composed of keratin (Girard, 2013 pg 92). The shaft of each hair consists of three layers which include the cuticle, the cortex and the medulla. The cuticle of the hair is a translucent outer layer of the hair shaft.
The cuticle is made up with three different types of scales that cover the shaft: coronal, spinous and imbricate scales. The cortex is the main body of the hair and it is composed of elongated spindle-shaped cells. Sometimes the cortex “may contain cortical fusi, pigment granules, and/or large oval-to-round-shaped structures called ovoid bodies (Deedrick, 2004).” Ovid bodies are mainly found in animal fur and are extremely rare to be found in human hair. Finally in human hair, the medulla is the central core of cells that could be present in the hair. The medulla is generally shapeless in appearance. Its structure can be described as fragmentary (incomplete) or trace, discontinuous/broken or continuous.
Unlike human hair, animal fur “can have radical color changes in a short distance, which is ca...

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...justice where it’s called for.

References
Bureau of Forensic Sciences. (n.d.) Collection of Fiber and Hair Evidence. California Department of Justice. Physical Evidence Bulletin
Deedrick, Douglas. W. (2004). Microscopy of hair part II: A practical guide and manual for animal hairs. Forensic Science Communications. Vol. 6(3).
Retrieved from http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/lab/forensic-science- communications/fsc/july2004/research/2004_03_research02.htm
Girard, James. E. (2013). Criminalistics: Forensic Science, Crime and Terrorism. Jones & Bartlett Learning. 3 e.d. 92-97
Scientific Working Group on Materials Analysis. (1999). Trace evidence recovery guidelines. Forensic Science Communications. Vol. 1(3). 1.0-5.5.3 Retrieved from http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/lab/forensic-science- communications/fsc/oct1999/trace.htm/#4.0.%20Contamination%20and%20Loss

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