Finger Prints - Francis Galton

Finger Prints

FINGER PRINTS
FINGER PRINTS
FRANCIS GALTON, F.R.S., ETC.
London MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1892
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INTRODUCTION
The palms of the hands and the soles of the feet are covered with two totally distinct classes of marks. The most conspicuous are the creases or folds of the skin which interest the followers of palmistry, but which are no more significant to others than the creases in old clothes; they show the lines of most frequent flexure, and nothing more. The least conspicuous marks, but the most numerous by far, are the so-called papillary ridges; they form the subject of the present book. If they had been only twice as large as they are, they would have attracted general attention and been commented on from the earliest times. Had Dean Swift known and thought of them, when writing about the Brobdingnags, whom he constructs on a scale twelve times as great as our own, he would certainly have made Gulliver express horror at the ribbed fingers of the giants who handled him. The ridges on their palms would have been as broad as the thongs of our coach-whips.

Francis Galton
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2011-08-05

Темы

Fingerprints -- Identification; Fingerprints -- Classification

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