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Use Cases
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Resources
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Pricing
1500 - 1599
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Medical practitioners in army and university settings begin to gather information on the cause and manner of death.
1700 - 1799
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Criminal investigation becomes a more evidence-based, rational procedure influenced by the rational values of the Enlightenment era.
1775 - 1799
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Writings on forensic science topics start to emerge during the late 18th century.
Image source: Forensic science
1773
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Carl Wilhelm Scheele devises a method for detecting arsenic in corpses.
Image source: Carl Wilhelm Scheele
1784
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John Toms is tried and convicted for murder with the use of pistol evidence.
Image source: Toms Shoes
1806
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Valentin Ross learns to detect arsenic in the walls of a victim's stomach.
1816
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A farm laborer is tried and convicted for murder based on forensic evidence in Warwick.
1832
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A chemist is called as an expert witness in a murder trial in 1832.
1835
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Henry Goddard pioneers the use of bullet comparison at Scotland Yard.
1858
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Thumbprints are used on documents as a security measure in India to prevent signature repudiation.
1875 - 1899
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The character Sherlock Holmes, written by Arthur Conan Doyle, popularizes reasoning and detective work.
Image source: Sherlock Holmes
1877
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Fingerprinting is used on contracts and deeds in Hooghly, India.
1879
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Alphonse Bertillon develops the Bertillon System for identifying criminals and citizens.
Image source: Alphonse Bertillon
1880
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Henry Faulds publishes his first paper on the usefulness of fingerprints for identification.
Image source: Henry Faulds
1885
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An article in Scientific American describes the use of microscopy to differentiate between blood samples in a criminal case.
1892
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Vucetich establishes the world's first fingerprint bureau.
1893
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Hans Gross writes the Handbook for Coroners, police officials, military policemen, considered the birth of criminalistics.
Image source: Hans Gross
1897
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A Fingerprint Bureau is established in Calcutta for the classification of criminal records.
1900 - 1999
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British pathologists Mikey Rochman, Francis Camps, Sydney Smith, and Keith Simpson pioneer new forensic science methods.
Image source: Forensic pathology
1901
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The Henry Classification System is accepted in England and Wales with the establishment of the first UK Fingerprint Bureau.
Image source: Henry Classification System
1901
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The Uhlenhuth test is invented to distinguish human blood from animal blood.
1902
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Fingerprinting is used in the New York Civil Service.
1909
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Archibald Reiss founds the first school of forensic science at the University of Lausanne.
1910
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Archibald Reiss establishes what may be the first criminal laboratory in Lyon, France.
Image source: Archibald Reiss
1900 - 1999
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Forensic science learned bodies like the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences foster the development of the field.
1983 - 1986
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DNA fingerprinting is used to identify the murderers of Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth.
1984
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Forensic DNA analysis is first used as a tool in criminal investigations.
1984
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1985
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DNA profiling is used to identify the rapist and killer of two teenagers in Narborough, Leicestershire.
Image source: DNA profiling
1987
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Colin Pitchfork is arrested after his DNA profile matches semen samples from a murder.
Image source: Colin Pitchfork
1999
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A study finds a high rate of false identifications in bite mark analysis, raising concerns about its reliability.
Image source: Forensic dentistry
2000 - 2099
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Forensic science's future is up for discussion as the field enters the 21st century.
2002
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The Houston Police Department is found to have fabricated evidence, leading to wrongful convictions.
Image source: Houston Police Department
2005
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2016
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The US Bureau of Justice Statistics provides the National Crime Victimization Survey.
2016
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The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights revises a document on forensic science.
Image source: Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
2019
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Over 17,200 forensic science technicians work in the United States.
This History of Forensic Science timeline was generated with the help of AI using information found on the internet.
We strive to make these timelines as accurate as possible, but occasionally inaccurates slip in. If you notice anything amiss, let us know at [email protected] and we'll correct it for future visitors.
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