Forensics science

Forensic's timeline

  • 1300

    13th Century China

    13th Century China
    a man in china killed someone with a and the police came and looked around his house then noticed that there were flies around a certain knife he owned which had blood from his victim.
  • Mathieu Orfila

    Mathieu Orfila
    Mathieu Joseph Bonaventure Orfila was a Spanish toxicologist and chemist, the founder of the science of toxicology.
  • William Herschel

    William Herschel
    Used thumbprints on documents to identify workers in India.
  • Alphonse Bertillon

    Alphonse Bertillon
    “Father of Criminal Identification”. Developed Anthropometry which uses body measurements to distinguish individuals.
  • Henry Faulds

    Henry Faulds
    Uses fingerprints to eliminate an innocent burglary suspect.
  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    Published his first Sherlock Holmes story; Considered the first “CSI”, featured in four novels and 56 short stories, popularized scientific crime-detection methods.
  • Francis Galton

    Published Finger Prints. Conducted the first definitive study of fingerprints and their classification. Gave proof of their uniqueness.
  • Hans Gross

    Wrote the first paper describing the application of scientific principles to the field of criminal investigation. Published Criminal Investigation.
  • Karl Landsteiner

    Discovered the ABO blood groups, later received Nobel Prize.
  • Edmond Locard

    Incorporated Gross’ principles within a workable crime lab; became the founder and director of the Institute of Criminalistics at the University of Lyons, France.
  • Albert S. Osborn

    Published Questioned Documents. Developed the fundamental principles of document examination
  • Leone Lattes

    Developed a method for determining blood type from dried blood.
  • August Vollmer

    ): Established the First Crime Lab in United States, located in Los Angeles
  • Calvin Goddard

    Developed a comparison microscope; first used to compare bullets to see if fired from the same weapon.