Fingerprints are commonly accepted by lay people as a highly valuable and reliable means of identification. Traders in early China used their fingerprints in clay seals, or on silk or paper to legitimise documents or loans, and by C13th, Eastern doctors noted the use of fingerprints to identify people. However, it wasn’t until Sir Francis Galton published his classification of fingerprint patterns that they began to attract attention in the forensic community [1]. Resting on the principles of persistence and individuality [2], fingerprint matching has been relied upon in court since 1892.
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Abstract Determining the cause of unexplained death in all age groups, including infants, is a priority in forensic medicine. The triple r...
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Abstract Layer-by-layer (LbL) dip coating, accompanying with the use of micelle structure, allows hydrophobic molecules to be coated on me...
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Abstract In this paper we present the study of a skull belonging to a young male from the Italian Bronze Age showing three perimortem inju...
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Find out more about the wide range of A Levels and full time courses available at Longley Park Sixth Form College, the only independent Sixt...
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Abstract To measure integral doses in image-guided radiation therapy, we developed an integral condenser dosimeter comprising a disposable...
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Objectives. To assess the association between short-term postoperative cognitive dysfuction (POCD) and inflammtory response in patients unde...
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