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Who is dr. edmond locard

2022.01.07 19:35




















For a while Locard worked as the assistant of Dr Alexandre Lacassagne and, a few years later, began pursuing his career in law. He passed the bar in and went on to study alongside anthropologist Alphonse Bertillon, famous for his anthropometric system of identifying criminals. In , Lyon police department finally offered Locard the opportunity to form the first police laboratory in the form of a few small attic rooms, where evidence collected from crime scenes could be scientifically examined.


It was not until that the police department officially recognised the laboratory, and so the first forensic science laboratory was officially formed. Locard is also renowned for his contribution to the improvement of dactylography, an area of study which deals with fingerprints. After the laboratory in Lyon was established, he developed the science of poroscopy, the study of fingerprint pores and the impressions produced by these pores. In the Lyon Police Department granted Locard the opportunity to create the first crime investigation laboratory where he could analyze evidence from crime scenes in a previously unused attic space.


Locard is considered a pioneer of forensic science and criminology. He developed multiple methods of forensic analysis that are still in use. He contributed considerable research into dactylography , or the study of fingerprints. In , he had done a Ph. Locard was interested in science and its relation to the law to solve criminal cases. In the year of , he studied medicine at Lyon, France. He was also interested in law and obtained a degree of law from Lyon in After that, he becomes an assistant to the French medical doctor Alexandre Lacassagne and held on that post until He was a doctor and an attorney as well with a great interest in the study of science and their relation with criminal law to solve the crime cases.


In , he started a journey throughout Europe and America to visit various crime laboratories and to meet up with different scientists.


He visited the police departments of Italy, Germany and Vienna. He also went to America and visited the police department of Chicago and New York. In the same year of , he spent time in Paris under the guidance of the French police officer and biometric researcher Alphonse Bertillon who introduced the anthropological techniques of anthropometry to classify peoples based on their physical measurements. The police department granted Locard the opportunity to establish an investigation laboratory to analyze evidence of the crime scene based on science and logic.