DutchNews.nl,
Wednesday 04 June 2014
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| (NOS) |
‘It's not
quite the Holy Grail of fingerprinting, but it's a very important discovery,’
Marcel de Puit, NFI fingerprint researcher, told news agency AFP on Wednesday.
‘Being able
to date the prints means you can determine when a potential suspect was at the
crime scene or which fingerprints are relevant for the investigation.'
Fingerprints
are made up of sweat and grease and these chemicals can be analysed. ‘Some
disappear over time and it's the relative proportions of these chemicals that
allow us to date a fingerprint,’ De Puit told AFP.
The
technique takes temperature into account but the scientists can now date prints
to within one or two days, if they are younger than 15 days. The NFI is now
hoping to begin testing the technique at real crime scenes and start creating a
data base.
In the
meantime, De Puit and his team are working on another technique: analysing
fingerprint chemicals to determine a suspect's drug or food intake, AFP says.
More on this (Dutch)

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