Hairs and Fibers

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HAIRS AND FIBERS

Transcript of Hairs and Fibers

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HAIRS AND

FIBERS

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HAIR OBJECTIVES• Recognize and understand the cuticle, cortex

and the medulla areas of hair• Describe the three phases of hair growth• Identify differences between animal and

human hairs• Explain proper collection of forensic

hair/evidence fibers• Describe and understand the role of DNA

typing in hair comparisons

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FIBERS OBJECTIVES

• Identify the difference between natural and manufactured fibers.

• Describe collection procedures for fibers

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What is Hair?

• An appendage of the skin that grows out of an organ known as the hair follicle.

• Structure – Root inside follicle– Shaft– Tip End

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SHAFT STRUCTURE

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Cuticle• The scale structure covering the exterior of the hair.

• Overlapping scales that always point toward the tip end of each hair.

* Formed from specialized cells that have hardened and flattened as the hair grows

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Cuticle (or scale) Pattern will not individually identify a suspect

One of the factors used to differentiate between Human and Animal Hair

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CORTEX

• Contains pigment granules

• Granules are used for points of comparison– Color– Size– Distribution

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MEDULLA

• Central canal of cells• Not always present– If present, not always consistent

• Diameter is known as Medullary Index– Human Index is less than 1/3 – Animal Index is ½ or greater

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TYPES OF MEDULLAS

• A) Fragmented– Uneven breaks in the

medulla• B) Interrupted– Even breaks in the

medulla• C) Continuous– Always constant

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HAIR GROWTH PHASES• Anagen

– Initial growth phase– Hair actively produced– Up to 6 years– Follicular Tag for DNA

• Catagen– Transition between An and Tel– Growth retards– Hair separates from blood

supply– Lasts 1-2 weeks

• Telogen– Hair growth ends– Hair sheds– 2-6 months

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HAIR ANALYSIS

• 1) Determine whether it is human or animal hair– HOW?

• Scale Pattern• Medulla Shape• Medulla Index

• 2) Determine hair origin• 3) Compare hair sample to known reference

standards– Must come from same area of body

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Race Ancestry Medulla Pigmentation Cross Section

Caucasoid European Frag/Not Present Straight or Wavy, Fine coarse, more evenly

distributed than Negroid

Oval/Round

Mongoloid Asian Continuous Very Dense, even distribution

Thick cross section

Negroid African Frag/Not Present Kinky, dense, unevenly

distributed

Flat/Oval

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EVIDENCE COLLECTION

• 50 full length from head• 24 full length from pubic area• Reference samples MUST BE from same area

of the body

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FIBERS

• Class of materials that are continuous filaments or are in a discrete elongated pieces, similar to lengths of threads.

• Different Types– Natural Fibers– Manufactured Fibers

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FIBERS

• Manufactured– Derived from either

natural or synthetic polymers

– Consists of regenerated (raw materials) and synthetic fibers (polymers)

– Acrylic, Rayon, Acetate

• Natural– Derived from animal or

plant– Same procedure as

human hair– Most common is cotton– Linen and wool

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FIBER ANALYSIS

• PLM or Comparison microscope used• Study – Cross section– Presence of specific particles– Color– Diameter– Striations on surface of fiber

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FIBERS ANALYZED USING PLM

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Cotton

LinenWool

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FIBER COLLECTION

• Use a vacuum to collect fibers.• Also use:– Scraping – Tape lift– Picking– Shaking