Real Evidence
Added: FORENSIC evfidence.
Physical evidence.
At a murder scene, evidence such as DNA, fingerprints, weapons, bloodstains, clothing fibers, and surveillance footage can be found. Additionally, other items like footprints, hair, tire tracks, and any potential trace evidence can be crucial in identifying suspects and building a case.
Anything traceable: blood, semen, fingerprints, footprints, tire tracks ,hair, skin, fibers(clothing), bullet casings, a weapon, cell phone, vehicle.
Tire tracks can provide valuable evidence in solving a crime by linking a specific vehicle to a crime scene, helping investigators determine the type of vehicle involved, its direction of travel, and potentially identifying suspects. Matching the specific tire tread pattern and size can help narrow down the search for the vehicle involved in the crime.
I believe car tracks are the evidence that the car's tires leave behind. So for example the tracks left behind in the mud, or in the snow, or even the burnt rubber tire tracks from accelerating too quickly.
The photos you take first are the Nessie "loops" in the water, from the rowboat, and the snow footprint in the Himalayas. Neither is good enough evidence.
With tracks by far. They are superior to tires for traction.
ruts
Imprint evidence refers to any impression left behind by an object on a surface, such as shoeprints, tire tracks, or tool marks. It is commonly used in forensic investigations to help identify the type of object that made the impression and potentially link it to a suspect.
It all comes down to what works best. Some tracks are really hard on tires, so to get to your next tire change you will need a hard wearing tire Some tracks are higher speeds requiring a special tire Street courses tend to be lower speed and big into acceleration and braking again a different tire Each individual car will be adjusted differently and Ideally each driver will prefer a tire that suits him.
Traction control.
Class evidence is the category for most evidence. Class evidence is evidence associated with a group and not a single source. Example: general piece of something (like a paint chip) blood (we can only generalize) Individual evidence is evidence that can be virtually, unambiguously traced to a source. Example: finger prints DNA tool marks (under a microscope) anything torn or broken (must be very specific)