Search results for "Sudan black"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Solving underwater crimes: development of latent prints made on submerged objects.
2013
Underwater crime scenes always present a challenge for forensic researchers, as the destructive effect of water considerably complicates the chances of recovering material of evidential value. The aim of this study is to tackle the problem of developing marks that have been left on submerged objects. Fingermark deposition was randomly made on two surfaces - glass and plastic whilst the material was submerged under tap water and then left for one to fifteen days before drying and development. For their later development, various reagents - Black Powder, Silver Metallic Powder, Fluorescent Powder, Sudan Black (powder and solution) and Small Particle Reagent - were used and the effectiveness o…
Beitrag zur Fettspezifit�t des Sudanschwarz B und Anderer Roter Sudanfarbstoffe bei Reinsubstanzen
1965
Auf Filterpapier aufgetragene Reinsubstanzen (Lipide, Eiweissubstanzen und Polysaccharide) wurden mit Sudan III, Sudan IV, Sudanrot B, Sudanrot VII B, Scharlach R med und Sudanschwarz B (SSB) gefarbt.
More about the developing of invisible lipstick-contaminated lipmarks on human skin: The usefulness of fluorescent dyes
2006
At the present time fingerprints are one of the simplest, and most reliable means of identification. Increasingly, crime scene investigators look for palm, foot, ear or lip prints. With regard to lip prints, the use, very common today, of protective or permanent lipsticks allow the production an invisible lipmark (or invisible lipstick-contaminated lipmark) which is possible to develop. Some results have already been published about developers useful for different kinds of surfaces (both porous and non-porous) as well as those which are more efficient in case of old or recent prints. The latest studies are about the developing on human skin, and they prove the usefulness of lysochromes (spe…