Title: Hairs
1Hairs Fibers
2Purpose of Hair
- Hair on mammals -
- helps to regulate body temperature
- decrease friction
- protect against sunlight
- Location of hair on humans
- Head
- Eyebrows and eyelashes
- Mustache and beard
- Underarms
- Auxillary (overall body)
- Pubic
3Morphology of Hair
- An appendage of the skin that grows out of an
organ known as the hair follicle.
- Hair - extends from root or bulb embedded in the
follicle, continues into a shaft, and terminates
at a tip end.
4The Shaft of Hair
- Composed of three layers cuticle, cortex, and
medulla.
5Structure of Hair
- Cuticle thin outer layer
- Cortex thicker middle layer
- Medulla inner layer
6Morphology Cuticle
- Protective coating made of overlapping scales,
produce a characteristic pattern - Scales always point toward tip of hair
- Not useful in individualizing human hair
- Can be used for species identification
http//www.pg.com/science/haircare/hair_twh_35/hai
r_twh_35_02.jpg
7Preserving scale pattern
- Since examination of internal structure of hair
requires loss of scale pattern, a scale case is
made. - Clear nail polish on microscope slide
- Hair embedded and allowed to dry before removed.
8Cuticle - Scales
- Three basic scale structures that make up the
cuticle - coronal (crown-like)
- spinous (petal-like)
- imbricate (flattened)
- Combinations and variations of these types are
possible.
http//www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/jan2004/res
earch/2004_01_research01b.htm
9Cuticle - Scales
- The coronal, or crown-like scale pattern
- found in hairs of very fine diameter and resemble
a stack of paper cups. - commonly found in
- hairs of small rodents and bats but-
- rarely in human hairs
http//www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/jan2004/res
earch/2004_01_research01b.htm
10Cuticle - Scales
- Spinous or petal-like scales
- triangular in shape and protrude from the hair
shaft. - Found at the proximal region of mink hairs and on
the fur hairs of seals, cats, and some other
animals. - Never found in human hairs!!
http//www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/jan2004/res
earch/2004_01_research01b.htm
11Cuticle - Scales
- Imbricate or flattened scales
- Consists of overlapping scales with narrow
margins - commonly found in human hairs and many animal
hairs.
12Morphology Cortex
- Embedded with pigment granules that give hair its
color - Three things for forensic comparison
- color
- shape
- distribution of the granules
www.pg.com/science/haircare/hair_twh_59.htm
13Morphology Medulla
- canal like structure of cells that runs through
the center of the cortex
14Types of Medulla
- The medulla (the inner section) can be hollow or
filled, absent, fragmented, continuous, doubled,
pigmented, or un- pigmented.
15Medullary Index
- Measure of the diameter of the medulla relative
to the diameter of the hair shaft - Usually expressed as a fraction
- Humans medullary index lt 1/3
- Animals medullary index gt 1/2
16Medullae of Different Species
17Medulla Shape
- Medulla shape is another characteristic that
varies from species to species
UNISERIAL (rabbit)
MULTISERIAL (rabbit)
VACUOLATED (dog, fox, common)
LATTICE (deer)
AMORPHOUS (human, common)
17
18Medulla of Different Species
19Forensic Analysis of Medulla
- Presence of medulla varies quite a bit even hair
to hair - Human head hairs generally have no medulla or may
be fragmented ones - except Mongoloid (Asian) race - medulla is
usually continuous - Most animals - medulla that is continuous or
interrupted - The shape of the medulla can help identify a
species - Examples
- Most animals and humans cylindrical
- Cats pearl shape
- Deer spherical occupying whole hair shaft
20Root of Hair
- Provide the tools to produce hair and continue
its growth - 3 Stages of Growth (different looking roots)
- Anagen -initial phase may last up to 6 years,
root is flame shaped - The cells around the follicle rapidly divide and
deposit materials in the hair. - Catagen transition phase (2-3 weeks), root is
elongated - Telogen phase where hair naturally falls out of
the skin, root is club-shaped - During this stage, hairs easily can be lost.
21Hair Growth Cycle
22Root Anagen Phase
- When pulled this root may contain a follicular
tag (rich source of DNA) - Root is flame shaped
Anagen hair root
Root w/ follicular tag
23Human Hairs
- Racial Determination
- Age and Sex?
- Forcibly Removed?
- Can Hairs be Individualized?
24Can the racial origin of hair be determined?
- Forensic terms Caucasoid, Negroid, Mongoloid
- Mongoloid
- continuous medullae
- Caucasian
- even distribution of pigment in cortex
- Negroid
- unevenly distributed pigment.
http//www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/july2000/de
edric1.htm
25Tip of the Shaft
Burned Cut
Razored Split
26Forcibly Removed?
Pulled Forcibly Removed
Shed
27Brushed-out hairs all have this kind of root.
A normal telogen hair with a hard 'club' end,
seen under (left) a light microscope and (right)
an electron microscope
This is an anagen hair, one which was pulled out
and not ready to be shed.
An anagen hair that has been plucked out notice
the soft, sticky tail
28Hair Individualization
- Nuclear DNA found in nucleus of each cell
- Follicular tag tissue adhering to root or
follicle - Will produce odds as one in billions or one in
trillions - Mitochondrial DNA found outside nucleus, passed
from only mother to child - Many more copies compared to nuclear DNA
- Will not individualize, but will exclude a
significant portion of population - Cannot microscopically distinguish similar hairs
from people maternally related
29Can DNA individualize hair?
- Yes! In some cases
- Best evidence to have is matching morphology AND
DNA - We will talk much more in Chapter 13 about this!
30Collection of Hair Evidence
31Collection of Hair Evidence
- Questioned and Reference hair must come from same
area of the body - Cannot compare head hair to pubic hair.
- Head hairs - 50 full length hairs from all areas
of the scalp - Other body parts 25 full length hairs
- All collected reference hairs must be full-length
32Identification and Comparison of Hair
- Morphological Characteristics - do not
individualize human hair to any single head or
body - Hair when collected properly - provides strong
circumstantial evidence - Most often used for comparison
- Scale structure
- Medullary index
- Medullary shape
- 11 percent of all morphological hair matches are
generally found to be non-matches - meaning microscopic hair comparisons are
presumptive in naturemust be confirmed by DNA
comparisons
33Using Hair in an Investigation
- Macroscopic investigation can indicate length,
color, and curliness. - Microscopic investigation can indicate fine
detail in hair structure. - Phase contrast microscopy focuses light that
passes through objects of different refractive
indexes - shows the presence of dye or other treatments.
- Fluorescence microscope beam of light of a
certain color is used to show particular
chemicals - Shows fine detail in hair structure
- Electron microscopes directs beams of electrons
at sample - provides more detail of the surface or interior
of the sample.
34Testing for Substances in the Hair Shaft
- Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA) can determine
concentrations of substances in the sample. - Identifies up to 14 elements in a 2 cm strand of
human hair - Hair placed in nuclear reactor and bombarded with
high energy neutrons - Probability of two individuals having same
concentration of 9 different elements 1 in a
million - Some elements Antimony, argon, bromine, copper,
gold, manganese, silver, sodium, zinc
35- Each element gives off its own gamma radiation
with different signals
36Testing for Substances in the Hair Shaft
- Chemical Analysis -
- Chemicals that the skin absorbs often can be
detected by analysis of the hair shaft. - Arsenic, lead, drugs
- Can be used to determine poisoning or drug
exposure - Hair shaft can establish a timeline for exposure
to toxins. - Human hair grows 1.3 cm per month
- If root is present, sections can be dated based
on distance from root
37Testing the Hair Follicle
- Microscopic assessment of the follicle is
performed first because it is cost effective and
quick. - If a microscopic match is found, the follicle can
be - blood tested and perhaps show the blood type.
- DNA analyzed to provide identification with a
high degree of confidence.
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39Fibers Natural
- Derived entirely from animal or plant sources
- Most prevalent plant fiber
- cotton.
- widespread use has made its evidential value
almost meaningless - Cotton has a ribbon-like shape with twists at
regular intervals - Animal sources
- sheep (wool), goats (mohair, cashmere) and many
other sources
Cotton
Wool
http//www.swicofil.com/images/cotton_microscopic.
jpg
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ary/report1/images/microscope_2.gif
40Man-Made Fibers
- Fibers derived from either natural or synthetic
polymers - The fibers are made by forcing polymeric material
through the holes of a spinneret - Rayon and then nylon were the first two man-made
fibers (year 1911)
http//www.naturalvisions.co.uk/pictures/thumbnail
/XMIC_0021_0001XX.jpg
41Man-Made Fibers Cont
- Regenerated Fibers
- Made from regenerated cellulose (wood or cotton
pulp) - Include such fibers as rayon, acetate, and
triacetate - Synthetic Fibers
- Currently manufactured
- Made from synthetic chemicals called polymers
- Include such fibers as nylons, polyesters, and
acrylics
42Polymers
- Basic chemical substance of all synthetic fibers
- Consist of long chains of repeating molecules.
The repeating molecular units in the polymer are
called monomers. (see pic p210) - Often referred as macromolecules or big
molecules - Countless varieties exist
43ID and Comparison of Man-Made Fibers
- Fabrics that can be fitted together at their torn
edge are easy to match - Microscopic comparison of color and diameter
- Comparison of lengthwise striations and pitting
on the surface of a fiber - The shape of the fiberex. Wayne Williams case
- Cross sections are generally helpful
- Note Combined factors of color, size, shape,
microscopic appearance, chemical composition, and
dye content make it very unlikely to find two
different people wearing identical fabrics
44Tools and Techniques to Aid in Comparing Fibers
- Light infrared spectrophotometercompares colors
and chemical composition through spectral
patterns - Chromatographycompares dye composition
- RefractionIDs fiber by refractive index
- Comparison microscopereveals shape, coloring,
pitting and striations