Tuesday, 28 December 2021

My Family Fingerprints Summer Learning Journey Rua Tekau

Today for Summer Learning Journey we had to find out what my family's fingerprints were.

There are three types of fingerprints: Arch, Whorl and Loop.

Did you know that people's fingerprints can be different types on each finger? You could have a whorl on one finger and an arch on another and a loop on your thumb!

In 1788 an anatomist Johann Christoph Andreas Mayer was the first person to recognize that fingerprints were unique to each person. This is how police find bad guys. They find fingerprints to try and match them up with someone.

The results on the index finger were: My Mum: Arches, Lily: Whorl, Sebastian: Whorl, Killian: Arches, Teddy: Arches and Myself: Whorl. I suspect my Dad has a Whorl because Mum has arches and maybe it is genetic but Dad was asleep after a night shift so I could not do his fingerprint.

I enjoyed looking closely at all the designs because all the whorls and arches looked really cool in the purple play-doh. It had all these tiny lines curving everywhere

I found it tricky to get Teddy (My one-year-old brother) to stay still because he is one and kept moving. So my Mum helped get his fingerprint while I took a picture.

Thank you for reading my blog. Here are the fingerprints:

1 comment:

  1. Kia ora Kylah,

    Wow! This is a fantastic blog post. Well done for completing this weeks Nanogirl activity. Great job thinking like an investigator and looking at your fingerprints in this activity.

    You’ve found some awesome facts about the history and science of fingerprints! Did you learn something about using science to solve crime?

    It is tricky to figure out which type your fingerprint is because they’re all very similar patterns! You did fantastically finding all of your family members patterns. I think my fingerprints are a loop pattern.

    I’m looking forward to seeing the rest of your awesome mahi.

    Ngā mihi,
    Lauren

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your positive, thoughtful, helpful comments:
Positive - something done well
Thoughtful - a sentence to let me know that you have read, watched or listened to my blog
Helpful - give some ideas for next time or ask a question

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.