Sciencing_Icons_Science SCIENCE
Sciencing_icons_biology biology, sciencing_icons_cells cells, sciencing_icons_molecular molecular, sciencing_icons_microorganisms microorganisms, sciencing_icons_genetics genetics, sciencing_icons_human body human body, sciencing_icons_ecology ecology, sciencing_icons_chemistry chemistry, sciencing_icons_atomic & molecular structure atomic & molecular structure, sciencing_icons_bonds bonds, sciencing_icons_reactions reactions, sciencing_icons_stoichiometry stoichiometry, sciencing_icons_solutions solutions, sciencing_icons_acids & bases acids & bases, sciencing_icons_thermodynamics thermodynamics, sciencing_icons_organic chemistry organic chemistry, sciencing_icons_physics physics, sciencing_icons_fundamentals-physics fundamentals, sciencing_icons_electronics electronics, sciencing_icons_waves waves, sciencing_icons_energy energy, sciencing_icons_fluid fluid, sciencing_icons_astronomy astronomy, sciencing_icons_geology geology, sciencing_icons_fundamentals-geology fundamentals, sciencing_icons_minerals & rocks minerals & rocks, sciencing_icons_earth scructure earth structure, sciencing_icons_fossils fossils, sciencing_icons_natural disasters natural disasters, sciencing_icons_nature nature, sciencing_icons_ecosystems ecosystems, sciencing_icons_environment environment, sciencing_icons_insects insects, sciencing_icons_plants & mushrooms plants & mushrooms, sciencing_icons_animals animals, sciencing_icons_math math, sciencing_icons_arithmetic arithmetic, sciencing_icons_addition & subtraction addition & subtraction, sciencing_icons_multiplication & division multiplication & division, sciencing_icons_decimals decimals, sciencing_icons_fractions fractions, sciencing_icons_conversions conversions, sciencing_icons_algebra algebra, sciencing_icons_working with units working with units, sciencing_icons_equations & expressions equations & expressions, sciencing_icons_ratios & proportions ratios & proportions, sciencing_icons_inequalities inequalities, sciencing_icons_exponents & logarithms exponents & logarithms, sciencing_icons_factorization factorization, sciencing_icons_functions functions, sciencing_icons_linear equations linear equations, sciencing_icons_graphs graphs, sciencing_icons_quadratics quadratics, sciencing_icons_polynomials polynomials, sciencing_icons_geometry geometry, sciencing_icons_fundamentals-geometry fundamentals, sciencing_icons_cartesian cartesian, sciencing_icons_circles circles, sciencing_icons_solids solids, sciencing_icons_trigonometry trigonometry, sciencing_icons_probability-statistics probability & statistics, sciencing_icons_mean-median-mode mean/median/mode, sciencing_icons_independent-dependent variables independent/dependent variables, sciencing_icons_deviation deviation, sciencing_icons_correlation correlation, sciencing_icons_sampling sampling, sciencing_icons_distributions distributions, sciencing_icons_probability probability, sciencing_icons_calculus calculus, sciencing_icons_differentiation-integration differentiation/integration, sciencing_icons_application application, sciencing_icons_projects projects, sciencing_icons_news news.
- Share Tweet Email Print
- Home ⋅
- Science Fair Project Ideas for Kids, Middle & High School Students ⋅
How to Do a Science Project on Fingerprints
Fingerprint Experiments
Fingerprint science projects introduce to students the techniques used in forensic science. The project given here can be used in the classroom as part of a lesson on fingerprints. It can also be used as the starting point for a science fair project, by adding on to these basic techniques to answer various questions. Ideas for additional projects include whether identical twins have similar fingerprints; whether the age of the fingerprint affects your ability to lift it from a material; and whether it is possible to make prints appear in color.
Lifting Latent Prints
Make a fingerprint by touching your fingers to your forehead and then touching a surface, such as a table top. The oils on your forehead will help make the fingerprint stronger.
Dust for prints by using a paintbrush to brush a small amount of talcum powder onto the surface. The powder will adhere to the oils left behind by your finger and the fingerprint will become visible. Blow gently to remove excess talcum powder.
Place a piece of clear tape over the fingerprint and press down on the tape gently. Carefully lift the tape up and then tape it onto a piece of black paper or black cardboard. The print should be clearly visible against the black background.
Repeat the steps above using prints made on different materials. For example, use metal, wood, colored plastic and clear plastic. Discuss whether this technique works well with all materials or only with some types of material.
LIfting Prints from a Clear Surface
Make a fingerprint by touching your fingers to your forehead and then touching a small, clear object, such as a plastic or glass cup or plastic bag.
Place the object carefully into a plastic zip-close bag.
Place the plastic cap from a 1-liter soda bottle into the plastic bag, so that it is open side up.
Squeeze two or three drops of super glue into the cap. Seal the bag shut. Leave the bag for about 30 minutes.
Hold the plastic bag away from your face and open it. Carefully remove and set aside the cap and then remove the object with the fingerprint. The fingerprints on it should be clearly visible.
Use this super glue technique to lift prints from a variety of different materials. This technique is usually used to life prints from flexible materials that are hard to dust. Try this technique on fabric, vinyl, plastic or other materials that you can think of. Discuss whether this technique is useful for all materials, or only for certain types of materials.
Things You'll Need
Related articles, fifth-grade science projects about fingerprints, how to transfer fingerprints, ingredients in fingerprinting powder, how to remove iron filings from magnets, science project: how to make a prosthetic hand, chemicals used in forensic science, why are safety goggles important, simple uses of concave mirrors, how to find fingerprints with a black light, science projects with cats, how to test glass hardness, how to project a hologram, what is pumice powder used for, how to build a black hole for a science fair project, how are concave mirrors used, forensic science projects for high school students, what is opaque plastic, fun experiments for separating mixtures, birds that like shiny things.
- Science Spot: Forensic Science Lesson Plans - Fingerprints
- Julian Trubin: What are Fingerprints?
- Reach Out Michigan: Fingerprinting: A Lesson on Classification
About the Author
Since graduating with a degree in biology, Lisa Magloff has worked in many countries. Accordingly, she specializes in writing about science and travel and has written for publications as diverse as the "Snowmass Sun" and "Caterer Middle East." With numerous published books and newspaper and magazine articles to her credit, Magloff has an eclectic knowledge of everything from cooking to nuclear reactor maintenance.
Photo Credits
fingerprint image by dip from Fotolia.com
Science Experiments with Fingerprints: A Low-Tech & Effective Forensic Technique
- Dawn Marcotte
- Categories : Great ideas for science fair projects
- Tags : Homework help & study guides
Before There Was DNA
The science of fingerprinting has allowed law enforcement agencies to identify and prosecute criminals since the early 1900s. Fingerprints are unique to each individual and cannot be altered in the same way physical appearance can be changed. Until the advent of DNA identification, fingerprinting was the primary scientific method of identifying a specific person and excluding all others.
These science experiments will introduce you to a few of the methods of taking fingerprints and allow you to practice identifying the owner of the fingerprints. This practical, low-tech experiment is effective and fun, making it a great science fair project.
How to Take Fingerprints
Use a standard ink pad to practice taking your fingerprints. Utilize ink that washes off with soap for easier clean up. Gently roll your index finger across the top of the ink pad, and then gently roll the inked finger across a white index card. The ridges and whorls on the finger should be clear to read. If they are not then keep practicing until you can make your own fingerprint clearly.
Practice lifting fingerprints from glass with the use of cocoa powder, a piece of hard candy and a drinking glass. Put the candy in your mouth until it is sticky. Remove the candy from your mouth using the index finger and thumb. Once both fingers are sticky grasp the glass so the index fingerprint is on the outside of the glass. Dust the outside of the glass with the cocoa powder and gently brush away the excess powder. Place the sticky side of clear tape over the fingerprint and pull away. Place the tape onto a white index card so the fingerprint is clearly visible. Repeat as necessary to master the skill.
Comparing Fingerprints For Identification
Fingerprints are not useful unless there is something to compare them with!
Get a friend, family member, or an attendee at your science fair to volunteer to have their fingerprints taken. Randomly choose three fingers and take the prints. Compare your fingerprints to these samples. How are they the same? How are they different? Use a magnifying glass to compare the prints if necessary. If time is available, repeat the process with additional volunteers, including those who are a different age from you. Compare the prints to see how age might affect the size or other factors of the print.
The final project will be to identify an unknown print. Have the same people who volunteered to participate earlier stand in a room with a clear plastic jar. Give them each a piece of hard candy and show them how to leave their print. Ask them to choose one person to leave a print on the jar without telling you who. Leave the room long enough for them to leave a fingerprint. Take the fingerprint from the glass and determine whose it is.
Completing this experiment will create a better understanding of forensic procedures.
Resources and Photo Credit
The History of Fingerprints, https://www.onin.com/fp/fphistory.html
The Thin Blue Line, https://www.policensw.com/info/fingerprints/indexfinger.html
Photo Credit: Flickr/Kevin Dooley
- Most Recent
- Free Silly Handwriting
- Easy Sub Plans Template
- Sprinkle Topped Shop
- My TpT Shop
- Amazon Favorites
- Free Video Series
The Sprinkle Topped Teacher
Teaching the Scientific Method with 7 Easy Science Experiments
I’m sure you have seen long, drawn-out lesson plans for teaching the scientific method in the elementary grades.
It doesn’t really have to be that difficult to teach kids how to work through the steps.
What if I told you there was an easy way to introduce the scientific method to your students and help reinforce science-related skills?
Well, there is! Maybe I should say I have seven easy ways to teach and reinforce the scientific method to students.
I actually came up with 7 Easy Science Experiments that do just that. (TIP: Use the code THANKYOU for 10% off today!)
They are easy, fun, and engaging.
Easy Experiments for Teaching the Scientific Method
I know you are wondering what these experiments entail. And you probably want to know just how easy they really are. Trust me. I like easy. They are easy.
The 7 easy science experiments include:
· Rainbow Milk Experiment
· Tornado in a Bottle Experiment
· Fingerprint Science Experiment (Read more about this one HERE )
· Marshmallow Toothpick Tower Experiment
· Coffee Filter Pigment Experiment
· Flubber Slime Experiment
· Clean and Dirty Penny Experiment
So, what’s in each book?
Each experiment can be used as a stand-alone project and includes:
· Directions for each experiment
· Full digital version
· Student flipbooks (fill in the blank, observation notes, experiment notes)
What is the digital version?
The digital version is the exact same lesson including the student worksheets, but it’s all done online.
Students get the same workbook pages on Google slides and can fill out the whole thing online and then click “present” to share their saved information with a teacher or parent.
This digital version can be incorporated into a virtual learning environment in a lot of ways.
You can make your own videos and upload them.
Maybe you don’t want to make a video. There are tons of them on YouTube that can be used when teaching the scientific method.
It’s versatile and super easy to adapt to your teaching style and teaching environment.
It can all be easily added to Google Drive, so you have the option of creating a full virtual experience for students.
Ways to Incorporate the 7 Easy Experiments Lessons into the Classroom
There are a lot of ways to use these lessons for teaching the scientific method.
Use it for an end-of-week, fun day activity on Fridays.
It makes a great reward lesson once students have accomplished a class goal.
It can be used for extension or enrichment activities.
What Other Teachers are Saying:
Conclusion:
This bundle seriously has everything you need to teach and reinforce the scientific method. It has booklets, worksheets, directions, tab books, and a full digital version of the activities too.
Do you have any tried-and-true tricks for teaching the scientific method? Share your ideas with us!
P.S. Two ways to grab a copy of the 7 Easy Science Experiments
Shop The Sprinkle Topped Shop and use the code: THANKYOU for a discounted price!
Shop my TeachersPayTeacher s store!
Share this:
You may also like, distance learning math activities for a younger crowd, blank handwriting worksheets, formative assessment in the classroom, using forensics in your science experiments, handwriting made fun.
| |
|
|
Fingerprinting Science Activity for Kids
By: Author Jacquie Fisher
Posted on Published: April 30, 2019
Categories Kids Activities & Crafts , Science Experiments
This fingerprinting science activity for kids is a great for a DIY spy and detective party, learning about the human body or at-home CSI idea!
My daughter is a HUGE fan of mysteries!
In fact, that’s the topic of this week’s book list: 15 Marvelous Mystery Books for Kids . She enjoys scouring the pages for clues and trying to come up with a solution before the story reveals it to her.
Fingerprinting for Kids: Science Activities
In real life, she asks a lot of those “detective” questions — How, Why, Who? — the perfect opening to creative problem solving.
During one of our recent mystery reads, she was intrigued by the idea of fingerprints.
So I thought we would try to learn more about this since so many detective books refer to “finding their prints!” 🙂 We’ll outline a few techniques we used along with affiliate links for items we used during our ‘spy mission’!
Fingerprints for Kids
I always remember thinking the idea of fingerprints was really interesting. If you grew up in the 1970’s or 1980’s, you might recall the super cool Ed Emberley Fingerprint Fun books where you could make animals using your fingerprints.
Fingerprint science is popular with kids who love spy & detective activities and a fun experiment that explores one area of the human body — if you missed the Science of Sound Waves experiment , hop over and try that one too as kids get a big kick out of the different ways our body works!
Our first step was to get a close-up look at our fingerprints.
Now most parents will tell you all you need to do is give a kids some chocolate and you’ll find a messy set of prints all over the walls 😉
Or there’s always the good old fashion FingerPrint Pad ink kits too.
But I thought we’d try a less messy approach 🙂
We used some Crayola Model Magic Clay and had each member of the family press one of their fingers into it to create a fingerprint.
Playdough didn’t work so well for us so I would suggest something more firm. If you want to preserve the fingerprints, I would use a good oven bake clay so they are more permenant.
Once we had our prints, we grabbed our much-loved Kids Magnifying Glass — seriously, you need to have one of these around the house for the kids to use — AMAZING science tool that is super cheap!
As we looked at the prints, we noticed a few really cool things!
Fingerprint Science Observations
There were a few thing we noticed right away after taking a close look at the fingerprints we gathered:
• Not all of our fingerprints looked the same even though we are all related.
• Some of our prints have a swirl pattern to them while others looked liked ‘mountains’.
• There were a different numbers of lines in each of our fingerprints — sometimes the lines are really close together and sometimes they are farther apart.
Even though the clay was pretty cool, we wanted a more detailed view of our prints.
So we pulled out the baby powder and put some on our fingers. (If you don’t have any powder in the house, try flour or powdered sugar instead).
Then we placed a piece of Clear Packaging Tape over the powdered finger and Voila! instant fingerprint!
I know – pretty awesome isn’t it?!
Hold the tape up to the light and you can really see all the lines and ridges plus a very clear view of the fingerprint pattern.
We also taped our prints to black construction paper so we could view them again later.
Dusting for Fingerprints
But we still wanted to answer one more question — where can we find fingerprints?
So we talked about places around the house that people were most likely to touch — doorknobs, the handle on the fridge, glasses, etc.
Then we grabbed our baby powder and got to work.
We used a Makeup Brush to lightly tap baby powder onto the handles of the fridge. Be sure not to brush it on hard or you can brush away the prints – they’re delicate little suckers.
And then we also tapped some powder onto our breakfast glasses to see if we could lift some prints off them with the tape too.
We used the clear packing tape to cover the powdered areas and then placed the tape onto a dark blue construction paper so we could see if there were any prints.
We could easily tell that some of the prints belonged to Mom or Dad just due to their size.
Then we used the prints we created in the pink clay as a comparison to our newly found ones.
The Science Behind Fingerprints: Forensic Analysis
So what can you learn from collecting fingerprints?
Quite a few things!
The study of fingerprints is called dactyloscopy and is used by detectives (such as the police, FBI and those that investigate crime scenes) and also medical personnel.
First, everyone has different fingerprints — no two are alike (kind of like snowflakes).
And yes, even twins will have different prints.
Here’s a great post from Livestrong about how fingerprints form in the womb .
Now even though we all have different fingerprints, there are really one three common types of prints: arches, loops and whorls.
After you create your own fingerprints at home, match them up to the prints in these photos to learn more about your individual fingerprint pattern.
Be sure to look at all the prints of family members — do you all fall into the same pattern?
Doctors are researching how fingerprint patterns can tell us more about a person’s health — for example, they’ve found that those with ridges closer together are more likely to develop certain diseases later in life.
If you’d like to learn more about fingerprints, browse these affiliate links for great hands-on science kits — they make great gifts for kids who love the idea of playing detective or those interested in forensic science:
4M Fingerprint Kit for Kids
You can also head over to Wonderopolis for more fingerprint fun for kids .
Don’t forget to check out the titles on our Be a Detective: 15 Marvelous Mystery Books for Kids!
More Hands-on Science Activities for Kids:
3D Phases of the Moon Project
LEGO Water Cycle Activity
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
This science project was super fun because the class got to work like real detectives and learn the science behind fingerprints. Students used Play-Doh and ink pads to examine their different fingerprint patterns and identify the scientific names of each fingerprint.
In the Fingerprint Science Experiment, students will become detectives and investigate their fingerprints while learning about the scientific method! This STEM fingerprint science experiment will cover the three types of fingerprints and super fun facts about fingerprints in humans and animals.
Detectives can see nonvisible fingerprints by using a technique called fuming. According to Home Science Tools, students can do this by placing an object with fingerprints under a glass jar, along with a glob of superglue. The fumes from the superglue make the fingerprints visible.
Fingerprint science projects introduce to students the techniques used in forensic science. The project given here can be used in the classroom as part of a lesson on fingerprints. It can also be used as the starting point for a science fair project, by adding on to these basic techniques to answer various questions.
Detecting invisible fingerprints is an important task in forensic science, a branch of science that helps criminal investigations by collecting and analyzing evidence from crime scenes. Fingerprints are the most commonly-collected type of evidence.
These science experiments will introduce you to a few of the methods of taking fingerprints and allow you to practice identifying the owner of the fingerprints. This practical, low-tech experiment is effective and fun, making it a great science fair project.
The two basic ideas scientists believe about fingerprints are: Fingerprints never change. Small ridges form on a person’s hands and feet before they are born and do not change for as long as the person lives. No two fingerprints are alike.
· Fingerprint Science Experiment (Read more about this one HERE) · Marshmallow Toothpick Tower Experiment. · Coffee Filter Pigment Experiment. · Flubber Slime Experiment. · Clean and Dirty Penny Experiment. So, what’s in each book? Each experiment can be used as a stand-alone project and includes: · Directions for each experiment.
Fingerprint science fair projects and experiments: topics, ideas, resources, and sample projects.
Fingerprint science is popular with kids who love spy & detective activities and a fun experiment that explores one area of the human body — if you missed the Science of Sound Waves experiment, hop over and try that one too as kids get a big kick out of the different ways our body works!