people can get dirt or move them which contaminates them so they can't really find out things from the fibres then. but if you look on websites you can find out.
What you can do is make a nice chicken ceasar salad, and then you can figure out the case.
no
so that no evedence is contaminated or removed
So they can better determine the area of the crime scene. Also to keep onlooking citizens out of the crime scene so it is not contaminated.
Scientific detectives
Heat and magnified fibers
To prevent the contamination of any evidence possibly left at the scene.
its gauze and gauze hahha LOL
Macroscopic scene - the "large view" of a crime scene, including things such as locations, the victim's body, cars, and buildings. Microscopic scene - a crime scene viewed in terms of specific objects and pieces of evidence associated with the crime, such as knives, guns, hairs, fibers, and biological fluids.
Crime scene investigators begin by having the scene of the crime secured. They must then take photographs of the crime scene, take notes on important pieces of information (such as posistion of a victim, presence of bruises or swelling), and identify items that need further testing in the lab. A crucial part of processing a scene is ensuring that evidence is not altered or contaminated. Failure to do so could result in all evidence being discarded.
Crime scene investigators analyze every aspect of a crime, including the body, the location, fingerprints, fibers, ground, and sometimes air and water. They use special equipment that displays blood stains that may have been scrubbed away.
primary crime scene
"Crime scene" refers to the physical location where a crime took place, including evidence and potential clues. "Scene of a crime" is a broader term that can refer to not just the physical location, but also the surrounding circumstances and events related to the crime.