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3.1: Early investigators

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    52957
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    Have you ever wondered why we have ridges on the bottoms of our hands and feet? Have you ever looked at your fingerprints and thought what evolutionary trickery is this? Indeed, evolution is the culprit as it was not sufficient that humanoids decided two legs were better than four legs, but now two of those legs were freed up to hold and use tools, mostly sticks and rocks at first, and humanoids needed a way to tightly grasp those items. Ridges therefore provide the friction necessary to grasp sticks and stones and perhaps help Og from slipping off the edge of the boulder to Og’s doom. So, like the chicken and the egg arguments, which came first, the standing or the ridges? I suppose we shall never know, but your author does firmly believe that having ridged skin where it mattered is one of those things that helped humanoids jump to the top of the ladder. We also likely will not know exactly when humans noticed the individual characteristics of those ridges, especially the ridges on the tips of the fingers, the distal phalanx. We do have examples of fingerprints being used as a form of signatures recorded on clay tablets and on the bottoms of clay pots in China, Persia, and Babylon around 1000 B.C. Our written history of fingerprint identification begins in the 17th century and continues to this day.


    This page titled 3.1: Early investigators is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by David Doglietto.

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