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Victor Hensen was the first scientist to study plankton. He was a German zoologist and lived from 1835 to 1924.
edwin kiuper
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fire
That's easy teachers they study study so they can teach you and make you study.
Sir Francis Galton, an English scientist, conducted the first definitive study of fingerprints in the late 19th century. His work laid the foundation for the use of fingerprints as a reliable method of personal identification.
The first definitive study using fingerprints was conducted by Sir Francis Galton, an English scientist, in the late 19th century. Galton's research laid the foundation for the use of fingerprints in forensics and identification.
The first definitive study of fingerprints still used today is the 1892 paper by Sir Francis Galton, a British anthropologist and cousin of Charles Darwin. Galton's work on fingerprints laid the foundation for modern fingerprint identification, and his classification system is still widely used in forensic science.
People who study fingerprints are called fingerprint analysts or forensic scientists specializing in fingerprint analysis. They are trained to examine and compare fingerprints for identification purposes in criminal investigations.
Fingerprints have been known to be unique to individuals since ancient times, but their scientific classification and use in forensic identification began in the late 19th century. Sir Francis Galton published the first comprehensive study on fingerprints in his book "Fingerprints" in 1892, establishing fingerprinting as a reliable method of identification.
Scientifically, the study of fingerprints is called Dermatoglyphics. The name was derived from the ancient Greek 'derma' which means 'skin' and 'glyph' that means 'carving'.
In 1684, the English physician, botanist, and microscopist Nehemiah Grew (1641-1712) published the first scientific paper to describe the ridge structure of the skin covering the fingers and palms. In 1685, the Dutch physician Govard Bidloo (1649-1713) and the Italian physician Marcello Mappighi (1628-1694) published books on anatomy which also illustrated the ridge structure of the fingers. A century later, in 1788, the German anatomist Johann Christoph Andreas Mayer (1747-1801) recognized that fingerprints are unique to each individual.
The study of fingerprints as a method of identification.
the bar foundation study
Dactylography - the study of fingerprints as a method of identification
It might be dactylphobia... Dactylscopy is the study of fingerprints, coming from the Greek word daktulos, meaning finger, and phobia obviously being 'fear'...in the words of Gus Portokalos of My Big Fat Greek Wedding, "So there you go."
Uncopyrightable and dermatoglyphics (which is the study of fingerprints) are the only two I know of.