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0 / 30 Fotos
Why do we have fingerprints?
- There's way more to your fingerprints than their uniqueness and use to detectives. In fact, scientists believe that fingerprints help us improve our grip and also our touch perception.
© Shutterstock
1 / 30 Fotos
What else do we know about fingerprints?
- Fingerprints are tiny ridges in our skin, and the impressions left behind touching something are imprinted from sweat and oil on top of these ridges.
© Shutterstock
2 / 30 Fotos
Your fingerprints have been with you since before you were born
- The ridges on the tips of our fingers form in the womb, beginning around 10 weeks gestation. By the time a fetus is around 17 weeks, these unique patterns are fully formed.
© Shutterstock
3 / 30 Fotos
How fingerprints develop
- Human skin has several layers, and each layer has sub-layers. A developing fetus is constantly stretching these layers, which can snag on each other. Scientists believe fingerprints form when the bottom layer grows at a different rate than the rest of the skin.
© Shutterstock
4 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints play a key role in our sense of touch
- Research has shown that ridges in our fingerprints increase our tactile sensitivity.
© Shutterstock
5 / 30 Fotos
The sensitivity of human touch
- According to a study published in the Journal of Neuroscience, the ridges of our fingerprints feature finely tuned receptive fields, which may explain the sensitivity of human touch.
© Shutterstock
6 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints start out like hair follicles
- According to one study, fingerprints start out looking like the same patches of cells that form hair follicles. But instead of turning into hair follicles, these cells form ridges patterned in whorls and loops due to tiny differences in the expression of the genes responsible for forming skin structures.
© Shutterstock
7 / 30 Fotos
Some people are born without fingerprints
- Known as adermatoglyphia, this rare genetic disorder causes the failure of ridge formations before birth. The finger pads of people with adermatoglyphia are entirely flat, but, otherwise, people with the condition are healthy.
© Shutterstock
8 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints follow the Turing pattern
- The different fingerprint shapes can be explained in part by a theory proposed by British mathematician Alan Turing. In the '50s, Turing theorized that substances made by an embryo's cells would promote the formation of a structure, but act with opposing substances that suppress the growth of those structures.
© Shutterstock
9 / 30 Fotos
The Turing pattern
- By interacting with one another, these substances could make a pattern that has repeated units with even spacing between them, just like our many fingerprint ridges.
© Shutterstock
10 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints are the same phenomenon as zebra stripes
- The Turing pattern, which likely creates our fingerprints, is also responsible for other patterns occurring in nature, like zebra stripes and leopard spots.
© Shutterstock
11 / 30 Fotos
The scientific name for fingerprints
- The scientific name for fingerprints is dermatoglyph. The term comes from the Greek words derma (skin) and glyphe (carving).
© Shutterstock
12 / 30 Fotos
There are three main fingerprint patterns
- Scientists categorize fingerprint patterns as either a whorl, loop, or arch. The arrangement and placement of them are what make your fingerprints unique.
© Shutterstock
13 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints may help prevent blisters
- Have you noticed that it's much harder to get a blister on your fingertips or toes? Studies suggest that the ridges may allow our skin to stretch and deform more easily, which can protect it from damage.
© Shutterstock
14 / 30 Fotos
Human fingerprints are unique to primates… and koalas
- Monkeys and apes have fingerprints that function similarly to humans. But the koala, which is a very distant relative to us, is the only other animal that also has fingerprints that look like ours.
© Shutterstock
15 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints don't change with age
- As you get older, it's natural for your skin to change. But wrinkling doesn't come for your fingertips, which means they remain the same since they were formed.
© Shutterstock
16 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints are durable
- Even in death, our fingerprints stick around, which makes them very helpful in identifying bodies.
© Shutterstock
17 / 30 Fotos
But you can lose them
- Hard and rough tactile work like bricklaying, and chemotherapy drugs like capecitabine, can erode and even erase fingerprints.
© Shutterstock
18 / 30 Fotos
No two people have the same fingerprint pattern
- Fingerprints are unique to each individual, and no two people on the planet have the same fingerprint pattern—not even identical twins.
© Shutterstock
19 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints were once used to seal contracts
- Back in ancient Babylon, you could use a fingerprint to seal an agreement. This suggests people living under the reign of Hammurabi understood the uniqueness of fingerprints.
© Shutterstock
20 / 30 Fotos
Before fingerprints, law enforcement used bone measurements
- Before the advent of fingerprint identification, law enforcement agencies used a variety of methods to identify criminals. The Bertillon System, developed by French anthropologist Alphonse Bertillon in 1879, was a technique for describing individuals using photographs and measurements of specific physical characteristics. In the early 1900s, fingerprint identification began to replace the Bertillon System.
© Shutterstock
21 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints were first used in a case in 1892
- The first case ever to use fingerprints to convict a criminal was a murder trial in Argentina in 1892. The police discovered a bloody fingerprint on a door frame and analyzed it to identify the murderer.
© Shutterstock
22 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprint analysis is fallible
- When examining fingerprints, experts attempt to match as many points of comparison as possible, but in the US there's no minimum for a match. However, many other countries have set standards for what constitutes a positive identification. A 2011 study found a false positive rate of 0.1%.
© Shutterstock
23 / 30 Fotos
Mark Twain saw the value of fingerprint evidence
- Two of the author’s books, 'Life on the Mississippi' (1883) and 'Pudd'n Head Wilson' (1893), feature the use of fingerprints to nab criminals. However, US officials wouldn't implement fingerprinting practices until the early 20th century.
© Shutterstock
24 / 30 Fotos
World War II saw a boom in fingerprint collection
- Wartime vigilance meant that the FBI was collecting more fingerprints from soldiers, foreign agents, military suppliers, and potential spies. By 1943, the collection included more than 70 million fingerprints.
© Shutterstock
25 / 30 Fotos
There have been many cases of mass fingerprinting
- In 1948, a shocking murder of a three-year-old girl inspired British police to demand fingerprints from over 40,000 men. But even with all those prints, they failed to find a match. It wasn't until they tracked down the 200 men who had failed to produce prints that among them they found their culprit.
© Shutterstock
26 / 30 Fotos
The FBI stores everybody's prints together
- In the US, if you've ever applied for a teaching job, the police force, or any government position, the FBI has your fingerprints. In 2015, the agency announced that they were melding their criminal and civil fingerprint databases.
© Shutterstock
27 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints can be used to diagnose certain medical conditions
- Because fingerprints are to some extent influenced by genetics, they can be used to diagnose certain medical conditions, such as Down syndrome. People with Down syndrome typically have a characteristic fingerprint pattern that includes fewer loops and more arches and whorls.
© Shutterstock
28 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints are heavily relied upon by law enforcement
- Law enforcement agencies use fingerprints in a variety of ways, such as to identify criminals who have left their fingerprints at a crime scene. But they're also used to identify victims, like those who've been killed or injured in a homicide or assault. Sources: (Mental Floss) (Reader's Digest) See also: The Lindbergh baby kidnapping: America's most notorious crime
© Shutterstock
29 / 30 Fotos
© Shutterstock
0 / 30 Fotos
Why do we have fingerprints?
- There's way more to your fingerprints than their uniqueness and use to detectives. In fact, scientists believe that fingerprints help us improve our grip and also our touch perception.
© Shutterstock
1 / 30 Fotos
What else do we know about fingerprints?
- Fingerprints are tiny ridges in our skin, and the impressions left behind touching something are imprinted from sweat and oil on top of these ridges.
© Shutterstock
2 / 30 Fotos
Your fingerprints have been with you since before you were born
- The ridges on the tips of our fingers form in the womb, beginning around 10 weeks gestation. By the time a fetus is around 17 weeks, these unique patterns are fully formed.
© Shutterstock
3 / 30 Fotos
How fingerprints develop
- Human skin has several layers, and each layer has sub-layers. A developing fetus is constantly stretching these layers, which can snag on each other. Scientists believe fingerprints form when the bottom layer grows at a different rate than the rest of the skin.
© Shutterstock
4 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints play a key role in our sense of touch
- Research has shown that ridges in our fingerprints increase our tactile sensitivity.
© Shutterstock
5 / 30 Fotos
The sensitivity of human touch
- According to a study published in the Journal of Neuroscience, the ridges of our fingerprints feature finely tuned receptive fields, which may explain the sensitivity of human touch.
© Shutterstock
6 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints start out like hair follicles
- According to one study, fingerprints start out looking like the same patches of cells that form hair follicles. But instead of turning into hair follicles, these cells form ridges patterned in whorls and loops due to tiny differences in the expression of the genes responsible for forming skin structures.
© Shutterstock
7 / 30 Fotos
Some people are born without fingerprints
- Known as adermatoglyphia, this rare genetic disorder causes the failure of ridge formations before birth. The finger pads of people with adermatoglyphia are entirely flat, but, otherwise, people with the condition are healthy.
© Shutterstock
8 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints follow the Turing pattern
- The different fingerprint shapes can be explained in part by a theory proposed by British mathematician Alan Turing. In the '50s, Turing theorized that substances made by an embryo's cells would promote the formation of a structure, but act with opposing substances that suppress the growth of those structures.
© Shutterstock
9 / 30 Fotos
The Turing pattern
- By interacting with one another, these substances could make a pattern that has repeated units with even spacing between them, just like our many fingerprint ridges.
© Shutterstock
10 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints are the same phenomenon as zebra stripes
- The Turing pattern, which likely creates our fingerprints, is also responsible for other patterns occurring in nature, like zebra stripes and leopard spots.
© Shutterstock
11 / 30 Fotos
The scientific name for fingerprints
- The scientific name for fingerprints is dermatoglyph. The term comes from the Greek words derma (skin) and glyphe (carving).
© Shutterstock
12 / 30 Fotos
There are three main fingerprint patterns
- Scientists categorize fingerprint patterns as either a whorl, loop, or arch. The arrangement and placement of them are what make your fingerprints unique.
© Shutterstock
13 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints may help prevent blisters
- Have you noticed that it's much harder to get a blister on your fingertips or toes? Studies suggest that the ridges may allow our skin to stretch and deform more easily, which can protect it from damage.
© Shutterstock
14 / 30 Fotos
Human fingerprints are unique to primates… and koalas
- Monkeys and apes have fingerprints that function similarly to humans. But the koala, which is a very distant relative to us, is the only other animal that also has fingerprints that look like ours.
© Shutterstock
15 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints don't change with age
- As you get older, it's natural for your skin to change. But wrinkling doesn't come for your fingertips, which means they remain the same since they were formed.
© Shutterstock
16 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints are durable
- Even in death, our fingerprints stick around, which makes them very helpful in identifying bodies.
© Shutterstock
17 / 30 Fotos
But you can lose them
- Hard and rough tactile work like bricklaying, and chemotherapy drugs like capecitabine, can erode and even erase fingerprints.
© Shutterstock
18 / 30 Fotos
No two people have the same fingerprint pattern
- Fingerprints are unique to each individual, and no two people on the planet have the same fingerprint pattern—not even identical twins.
© Shutterstock
19 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints were once used to seal contracts
- Back in ancient Babylon, you could use a fingerprint to seal an agreement. This suggests people living under the reign of Hammurabi understood the uniqueness of fingerprints.
© Shutterstock
20 / 30 Fotos
Before fingerprints, law enforcement used bone measurements
- Before the advent of fingerprint identification, law enforcement agencies used a variety of methods to identify criminals. The Bertillon System, developed by French anthropologist Alphonse Bertillon in 1879, was a technique for describing individuals using photographs and measurements of specific physical characteristics. In the early 1900s, fingerprint identification began to replace the Bertillon System.
© Shutterstock
21 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints were first used in a case in 1892
- The first case ever to use fingerprints to convict a criminal was a murder trial in Argentina in 1892. The police discovered a bloody fingerprint on a door frame and analyzed it to identify the murderer.
© Shutterstock
22 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprint analysis is fallible
- When examining fingerprints, experts attempt to match as many points of comparison as possible, but in the US there's no minimum for a match. However, many other countries have set standards for what constitutes a positive identification. A 2011 study found a false positive rate of 0.1%.
© Shutterstock
23 / 30 Fotos
Mark Twain saw the value of fingerprint evidence
- Two of the author’s books, 'Life on the Mississippi' (1883) and 'Pudd'n Head Wilson' (1893), feature the use of fingerprints to nab criminals. However, US officials wouldn't implement fingerprinting practices until the early 20th century.
© Shutterstock
24 / 30 Fotos
World War II saw a boom in fingerprint collection
- Wartime vigilance meant that the FBI was collecting more fingerprints from soldiers, foreign agents, military suppliers, and potential spies. By 1943, the collection included more than 70 million fingerprints.
© Shutterstock
25 / 30 Fotos
There have been many cases of mass fingerprinting
- In 1948, a shocking murder of a three-year-old girl inspired British police to demand fingerprints from over 40,000 men. But even with all those prints, they failed to find a match. It wasn't until they tracked down the 200 men who had failed to produce prints that among them they found their culprit.
© Shutterstock
26 / 30 Fotos
The FBI stores everybody's prints together
- In the US, if you've ever applied for a teaching job, the police force, or any government position, the FBI has your fingerprints. In 2015, the agency announced that they were melding their criminal and civil fingerprint databases.
© Shutterstock
27 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints can be used to diagnose certain medical conditions
- Because fingerprints are to some extent influenced by genetics, they can be used to diagnose certain medical conditions, such as Down syndrome. People with Down syndrome typically have a characteristic fingerprint pattern that includes fewer loops and more arches and whorls.
© Shutterstock
28 / 30 Fotos
Fingerprints are heavily relied upon by law enforcement
- Law enforcement agencies use fingerprints in a variety of ways, such as to identify criminals who have left their fingerprints at a crime scene. But they're also used to identify victims, like those who've been killed or injured in a homicide or assault. Sources: (Mental Floss) (Reader's Digest) See also: The Lindbergh baby kidnapping: America's most notorious crime
© Shutterstock
29 / 30 Fotos
Surprising facts about fingerprints, and why we even have them
Did you know any of these fingerprint facts?
© Shutterstock
Most people associate fingerprints with crime scenes and solving mysteries, yet they've been with you since before you were born. But how much do you really know about those unique lines and ridges? And why do we even have fingerprints in the first place? A fascinating aspect of the human body, fingerprints are far more than just a means of personal identification—they're a testament to the extraordinary intricacies of human biology and evolution.
Intrigued? Click on for some surprising facts about fingerprints.
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