Antiquity and the medieval period Fingerprints have been found on ancient
clay tablets, pottery. In
ancient China officials authenticated government documents with their fingerprints. In about 200 BCE, fingerprints were used to sign written
contracts in
Babylon. Fingerprints from 3D-scans of cuneiform tablets are extracted using the
GigaMesh Software Framework. References from the age of the Babylonian king
Hammurabi (reigned 1792–1750 BCE) indicate that law officials would take the fingerprints of people who had been arrested. During China's
Qin dynasty, records have shown that officials took hand prints and foot prints as well as fingerprints as evidence from a crime scene. In 650, the Chinese historian Kia Kung-Yen remarked that fingerprints could be used as a means of authentication. In his
Jami al-Tawarikh (Universal History), the Iranian physician
Rashid-al-Din Hamadani (1247–1318) refers to the Chinese practice of identifying people via their fingerprints, commenting: "Experience shows that no two individuals have fingers exactly alike." Whether these examples indicate that ancient peoples realized that fingerprints could uniquely identify individuals has been debated, with some arguing these examples are no more meaningful than an illiterate's mark on a document or an accidental remnant akin to a potter's mark on their clay.
Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries From the late 16th century onwards, European academics attempted to include fingerprints in scientific studies. But plausible conclusions could be established only from the mid-17th century onwards. In 1686, the professor of anatomy at the
University of Bologna Marcello Malpighi identified ridges, spirals and loops in fingerprints left on surfaces. In 1788, a German anatomist
Johann Christoph Andreas Mayer was the first European to conclude that fingerprints were unique to each individual.
19th century (–60) In 1823,
Jan Evangelista Purkyně identified nine fingerprint patterns. The nine patterns include the tented arch, the loop, and the whorl, which in modern-day forensics are considered ridge details. In 1840, following the murder of
Lord William Russell, a provincial doctor, Robert Blake Overton, wrote to
Scotland Yard suggesting checking for fingerprints. In 1853, the German anatomist
Georg von Meissner (1829–1905) studied friction ridges, and in 1858,
Sir William James Herschel initiated fingerprinting in India. In 1877, he first instituted the use of fingerprints on contracts and deeds to prevent the
repudiation of signatures in
Hooghly near
Kolkata and he registered government pensioners' fingerprints to prevent the collection of money by relatives after a pensioner's death. In 1880,
Henry Faulds, a Scottish surgeon in a Tokyo hospital, published his first paper on the usefulness of fingerprints for identification and proposed a method to record them with printing ink.
Henry Faulds also suggested, based on his studies, that fingerprints are unique to a human. Returning to Great Britain in 1886, he offered the concept to the
Metropolitan Police in London but it was dismissed at that time. Up until the early 1890s, police forces in the
United States and on the
European continent could not reliably identify criminals to track their
criminal record.
Francis Galton published a detailed statistical model of fingerprint analysis and identification in his 1892 book
Finger Prints. He had calculated that the chance of a "false positive" (two different individuals having the same fingerprints) was about 1 in 64 billion. In 1892,
Juan Vucetich, an Argentine chief police officer, created the first method of recording the fingerprints of individuals on file. In that same year,
Francisca Rojas was found in a house with neck injuries, while her two sons were found dead with their throats cut. Rojas accused a neighbour, but despite brutal interrogation, this neighbour would not confess to the crimes. Inspector Álvarez, a colleague of Vucetich, went to the scene and found a bloody thumb mark on a door. When it was compared with Rojas' prints, it was found to be identical with her right thumb. She then confessed to the murder of her sons. This was the first known murder case to be solved using fingerprint analysis. In
Kolkata, a fingerprint Bureau was established in 1897, after the Council of the Governor General approved a committee report that fingerprints should be used for the classification of criminal records. The bureau employees
Azizul Haque and
Hem Chandra Bose have been credited with the primary development of a fingerprint classification system eventually named after their supervisor,
Sir Edward Richard Henry.
20th century The French scientist Paul-Jean Coulier developed a method to transfer latent fingerprints on surfaces to paper using
iodine fuming. It allowed the London
Scotland Yard to start fingerprinting individuals and identify criminals using fingerprints in 1901. Soon after, American police departments adopted the same method and fingerprint identification became a standard practice in the United States. The identification of individuals through fingerprints for
law enforcement has been considered essential in the
United States since the beginning of the 20th century.
Body identification using fingerprints has also been valuable in the aftermath of
natural disasters and
anthropogenic hazards. In the United States, the
FBI manages a fingerprint identification system and database called the
Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS), which currently holds the fingerprints and criminal records of over 51 million criminal record subjects and over 1.5 million civil (non-criminal) fingerprint records.
OBIM, formerly U.S. VISIT, holds the largest repository of biometric identifiers in the U.S. government at over 260 million individual identities. When it was deployed in 2004, this repository, known as the Automated Biometric Identification System (IDENT), stored biometric data in the form of two-finger records. Between 2005 and 2009, the
DHS transitioned to a ten-print record standard in order to establish interoperability with IAFIS. being fingerprinted and photographed in 1928 In 1910,
Edmond Locard established the first
forensic lab in France. In many
jurisdictions the act of wearing gloves itself while committing a crime can be prosecuted as an
inchoate offense. == Use of fingerprints in schools ==