Abstract
Patterns similar to the papillary patterns of human fingers, palms, and soles can be found in living and inanimate nature. Studying such patterns and the structure of the ridged skin of humans and primates in comparison with similar formations on other objects is necessary for forensic science, forensic traceology, fingerprinting, and biometric identification. The article analyzes the history of the study of the ridged skin of humans, primates, and other animals by forensic scientists, zoologists, anthropologists, and representatives of other sciences.The author proposes systemizing and classifying the information about the analogs of papillary patterns and ridged skin on such grounds as the genus and type of carrier objects, relief structure, degree of comparability with the papillary pattern of human hands and soles.The article presents the most indicative varieties of analogs of papillary patterns in mammals, birds, fish, insects, corals, plants, and fungi. The author has studied and systemized structural features of the striped pattern of the skin of tigers and zebras, crests and stripes in corals, stripes and ridged patterns in fish. The data obtained on ridge formations, which are similar in structure and shape to the papillary patterns of human fingers and palms, will help to avoid expert errors during fingerprinting examination or erroneous placement of images of such formations in forensic databases.Knowledge of the structural features and properties of striped patterns of skins of specially protected wild animals, as well as the crest surface of paleontological museum objects, should be used for their identification by photo and video images in cases of embezzlement, smuggling, illegal hunting, and illegal trafficking.
Highlights
Patterns similar to the papillary patterns of human fingers, palms, and soles can be found in living and inanimate nature
The data obtained on ridge formations, which are similar in structure and shape to the papillary patterns of human fingers and palms, will help to avoid expert errors during fingerprinting examination or erroneous placement of images of such formations in forensic databases
Познание закономерностей образования и изменения сложных узоров на поверхностях различных объектов живой и неживой природы имеет важное значение для развития криминалистики, судебной трасологии, дактилоскопии, судебной экспертизы объектов дикой флоры и фауны, а также для разработки и внедрения новых методов биометрической идентификации
Summary
Patterns similar to the papillary patterns of human fingers, palms, and soles can be found in living and inanimate nature. Изучение узоров и гребневых образований, аналогичных папиллярным узорам рук человека или близких к ним по внешнему виду, имеет важное значение для понимания закономерностей образования идентификационных и диагностических признаков папиллярных узоров гребешковой кожи человека и использования этих сведений в криминалистике, судебной экспертизе, биометрии.
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