THE MICROSCOPE AS A CRIMINAL DETECTIVE.
(From the Scientific American.) The annals of criminal jurisprudence furnish an abundance of cases in which the microscope, in the hands of an expert, has been the means of eliciting missing links in the circumstantial evidence pointing to the guilt of the accused. Instances are cited where the instrument has shown hairs, clinging to the edge of an axe, to be those of a human beiug, iu direct contradiction of the statement of the prisoner, ascribing them to some animal; and similar scrutiny of fresh blood upon clothing has proved the origin of the stain beyond a reasonable doubt. When blood, however, has once become dry, several authorities assert that it is impossible to distinguish it from that of the ox, pig, sheep, horse, or goat. It is urged that the differences between the average sizes of their corpuscles are too irregular to measure accurately, and that a man’s life should not be put in question on the uncertain calculation of a blood corpuscle’s ratio of contraction in drying. In opposition to those views are some recent experiments made by Dr. Joseph G. Richardson, of Philadelphia. This investigation disposes of the first objection above mentioned, by pointing out that, while it may be
valid as regards feebly-magnified blood discs, it becomes void when these bodies are amplified 3700 times. Regarding the second, he stamps it as incorrect, and cites a case in which seven human blood discs, whose mean diameter had been accurately determined at 1'5236 of an inch, were subsequently computed to average D 3266, or only 1-352292 of an inch less than their actual magnitude. Dr. Richardson also points out, with to the last objection, that all the blood discs likely to bo mistaken for those of man being normally smaller, instead of contracting they would have to expand to bo conformed to those of human blood.- This expansion does not occur, so that the only possible mistake in diagnosis would be to suppose that ox blood was present when man’s blood had actually been shed ; so that at the Worst wo might contribute to a criminal’s escape, but never to the punishment of an innocent person. In order to afford a positive demonstration of tho facts, Dr. Richardson obtained, from each of two friends, three specimens of blood clots, from the veins of a man, an ox, and a sheep respectively, selected without his knowledge. By microscopical examination alone he was able to determine, with perfect accuracy, the origin of each sample. The corpuscles of human blood averaged 1-3-130, with a maximum of 1-3171, and a minimum of 1-3636 of an inch ; those of tho ox blood gave a mean measurement of 1-1602, with a maximum of 1-1317, and a minimum of 1T871; while those of tho sheep’s blood afforded a mean of 1-5952, with a maximum of 1-5105, and a minimum of l'Glsl of an inch. From these and other experiments, Dr. Richardson concludes that, since the red blood globules of tho pig, ox, rod deer, cat, horse, sheep, and goat “ are all so much smaller than even tho ordinary minimum size of the human x-od disc, as computed in my investigations, we are now able, by tho aid of the high powers of tho microscope and under favorable circumstaueos, positively to distinguish stains produced by human blood from those caused by tho blood of any one of tho animals just enu-mex-ated ; and this even after the lapse of five yoai-a (at least) from the date of their primary pi-odxictioxx."
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New Zealand Times, Volume XXX, Issue 4457, 2 July 1875, Page 3
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590THE MICROSCOPE AS A CRIMINAL DETECTIVE. New Zealand Times, Volume XXX, Issue 4457, 2 July 1875, Page 3
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