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3.5: Test Questions

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    52969
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    1. This person was a 17th century English botanist and microscopist who studied the structure of ridges in the epidermis and dermis of the hands and feet using a microscope
      1. Dr. Marcello Malphigi
      2. Sir William James Herschel
      3. Sir Francis Galton
      4. Nehemiah Grew
    2. This person was the first to discover that common patterns existed in human fingerprints. These patterns were loops, whorls, and arches, which he suggested would be useful in identification.
      1. Dr. Marcello Malphigi
      2. Sir William James Herschel
      3. Sir Francis Galton
      4. Nehemiah Grew
    3. This person was a physiologist and anatomist in Czechoslovakia, who studied the patterns of the human ridges and published a study in 1823 that recognized nine different types of patterns in the pads of the fingertips, or distal phalanx, by which humans could be identifie
      1. Dr. Marcello Malphigi
      2. Jan Evangelista Purkynje
      3. Sir Francis Galton
      4. Dr. Henry Faulds
    4. This person proposed using printers’ ink as a medium by which a person’s fingerprints could be recorded.
      1. Dr. Marcello Malphigi
      2. Jan Evangelista Purkynje
      3. Alphonse Bertillon
      4. Dr. Henry Faulds
    5. This person provided the methodology of fingerprint comparison by describing unique formations called minutiae in ridge-print skin.
      1. Dr. Marcello Malphigi
      2. Sir William James Herschel
      3. Sir Francis Galton
      4. Nehemiah Grew
    6. This person requested permission from the British Home Office to use fingerprints as a means to identify convicts within the jails he supervised. The request was denied.
      1. Dr. Marcello Malphigi
      2. Sir William James Herschel
      3. Sir Francis Galton
      4. Nehemiah Grew
    7. This person devised a method for the retrieval of ten-print fingerprint cards that divided fingerprints into two categories based on the presence of loops, whorls, and arches with a value being assigned to each finger based on the presence or absence of a whorl pattern.
      1. Sir Edward Richard Henry
      2. Sir William James Herschel
      3. Sir Francis Galton
      4. Dr. Henry Faulds
    8. This system of identification was based on the belief that once a person reached adulthood, the bones of the body would remain the same size:
      1. Automated Fingerprint Identification System
      2. Anthropometric Measurement System
      3. Bellflower System of Identification
      4. Craniological Measurement System
    9. This famous case in 1903 signaled the demise of the Bertillonage system of identification:
      1. Klaus Von Beulow case
      2. William Frick case
      3. Will West case
      4. Stielow case
    10. Which of the following was a drawback for the Bertillonage system of identification:
      1. The desk was made of wood and would warp with time
      2. The calipers used to measure the head were sharp and pointy
      3. The system was overly complex and required a lot of training to perform
      4. The person being measured would often fall to the ground

    This page titled 3.5: Test Questions is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by David Doglietto.

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