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Hair & Fiber Analysis.

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Presentation on theme: "Hair & Fiber Analysis."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hair & Fiber Analysis

2 How Many Hairs Do You Shed Per Day?

3 50 - 100 (Locard was pretty smart)

4 By the end of this unit, you will be able to…
Describe the parts/structure of hair including follicle, medulla, cortex, and cuticle Distinguish between human & animal hair Make or rule out a class match between hairs Explain how hair is used in a forensic investigation Calculate medullary index to help hair ID

5 Why Do Animals Have Hair?
Trap body heat Protect against friction/abrasion Block sunlight Enhance sense of touch or motion Vestigal (human body hair) Vestigal means no longer having a function due to evolutionary changes.

6 Hair Follicle (Part we see = shaft)
- Part of hair under skin where hair forms & grows (Part we see = shaft) If hair is forcibly removed it may have a “tag” of skin cells from the follicle

7 Hair with Follicle Attached
Only if forcibly removed Could get DNA Could get blood type Hair that falls out naturally or is cut lacks the follicle

8 Structure of Hair Shaft
Thin, outer cuticle (scaly appearance) cortex (thick part under cuticle containing pigment) Medulla (inner core that may or may not have pigment) - all made of keratin (protein) which is also fingernails, rhinoceros horn, and more!

9 Analogy For Hair Structure…

10 CUTICLE Thin, colorless, outermost layer made of overlapping scales
The structure of the scales is different for humans vs. various kinds of animals Scales always point toward tip of hair Human Deer

11 Cuticle Types Spinous Coronal Imbricate Spinous: scales look like petals (animals only, including cats) Coronal: scales look like stack of crowns (animals only, including rodents) Imbricate: flat, narrow scales (human)

12 SPINOUS CORONAL

13 Cortex Thickest part (in humans) Contains most of the pigment
Pigment comes in “granules” that are more visible in some hair as dots of color ARROW SHOWS CORTEX

14 Medulla BEAVER HUMAN DEER CAT

15 Medulla (types for class matches)

16 CONTINUOUS—NO BREAKS INTERRUPTED—SEGMENTS FRAGMENTED—RANDOM BREAKS NO MEDULLA

17 HAIR CHARACTERISTICS All characteristics are often but not always true
Racial patterns—can’t really ID race by hair—but a straight blond hair is almost certainly not from a person of African descent Individual variation—your hairs are not all identical (50 samples taken!) Body area variation—examples to follow Length can be useful but obviously changeable

18 COLOR Granule size varies (some people have larger pigment granules & grainy-looking cortex) Banded only in animals (see picture below) More pigment closer to cuticle in humans, closer to or in medulla in animals PIGMENT CLOSER TO CUTICLE PIGMENT ALL IN MEDULLA

19 CROSS-SECTION Circular [top picture]
Asian Head some body hair Oval (Caucasian; head) [middle pic] Flattened (African) [bottom pic] Triangular Beard hair Some body hair Diameter Larger for Asian smaller for African

20 TEXTURE Coarse (rough/tough/less flexible)
most animal hair is very coarse beard, pubic hairs more coarse (humans) Fine (soft/thin/very flexible) Caucasians children Blunt tip Body hair Tapered tip eyebrows/lashes BLUNT TIP

21 SHAPE straight (European, Asian) wavy (European)
kinky or coiled (African) buckled (pubic hair) KINKY HAIR BUCKLED HAIR

22 MEDULLA Double Medulla Thickness some beard hair
thicker medulla for animals Medulla index calculation DOUBLE MEDULLA THICK ANIMAL MEDULLA

23 Medullary Index Index = (Width of Medulla) / (Width of Entire Hair)
0.33 or less = human (smaller medulla) 0.5 or more = animal (larger medulla)

24 Hair Source -- Area of Body
Head Eyebrows/lashes Facial hair Body hair Underarm hair Pubic hair

25 Alteration of Hair Bleaching – makes hair yellowish, removes pigment, damages the cuticle scales Dyeing – colors the cortex and the cuticle (cuticle normally has no color)

26 Detecting Foreign Substances in Hair
Poisonous metals (lead, arsenic) and some drugs get incorporated into hair as it grows Hair resists decomposition, so the toxins remain trapped in the hair for a long time Hair growth rate can determine how long ago the poisoning or drug use occurred

27 Hair Growth Rate Hair grows at a rate of about 0.44 mm/day (1.3 cm/month) Some poisons and drugs accumulate in hair Provides timeline for when poisoning occurred Ex: A hair is found with traces of arsenic extending 25 mm from the follicle. How long has he been ingesting the poison? 25 mm / 0.44 = about 57 days (a couple months)

28 Neutron Activation Analysis
uses radiation from a nuclear reactor to detect the concentration of various metals in hair. Exact concentrations of each metal will vary from one individual to the next, providing a near-individual match (such as 1 in a million)


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