Introduction to Toxicology Kit, REFILL SKU: AP 10530R
Refill for kit AP 10530
Refill for kit AP 10530
This murder mystery provides inquiry based learning with an intriguing twist. Students apply many CSI techniques including fingerprinting (dusting with carbon powder, dusting with aluminum...
Students work through six experiments using math skills, biology, chemistry, problem solving, and deductive reasoning to determine whether the cabin is the crime scene
Explore how physics can play a role in criminal investigation.
Kemtec’s Analysis of Minerals & Soils kit now extends the student’s experience from investigating the physical and chemical properties of trace evidence from a crime scene, to learning to...
Footprints, shoe prints, tire tracks, and other impressions in soft materials are investigated as students become the detectives and learn to properly collect, record, photograph, and avoid...
Students use the scientific process to type blood and analyze hair, fingerprints, handwriting, fabrics, and fibers.
They use visual and microscopic observation, UV light, chromatography, replicating techniques, and wet chemistry to detect forgeries of checks, documents, and messages.
There is enough material for 5 groups. Often times, when collecting evidence at a crime scene, investigators may recover substances they are unable to identify in the field. Along with evidence...
Refill ONLY for Physical Properties of Glass, ALD9005
Kit contains an Instruction Manual and enough materials for 2 groups.
Refill for AP 10512 (Dusting for Fingerprints)
Students perfect their techniques as they prepare fingerprint evidence.
Introduce students to six standard fingerprinting techniques used for dusting, lifting, and developing prints from smooth, nonporous surfaces.
You will perform a series of chemical tests on the cafeteria ingredients and a control sample of aspirin, to determine if all the ingredients are what they are supposed to be.
There is enough material for 2 groups. Often times, when collecting evidence at a crime scene, investigators may recover substances they are unable to identify in the field. Along with evidence...
There is enough material for 5 groups. Discover how forensic scientists use hair to assist in solving crimes. You will discover the differences between human and animal hair as well as...
Dental records, like fingerprints, offer a form of positive identification. Not only do they differ in detail from person to person, but they last longer than other physical evidence and may be...
Kemtec’s Master Forensics Kit includes truncated versions of our Fingerprint Analysis, Soil and Mineral Analysis, Hair Analysis, Document Analysis, and Analysis of Drugs and Poisons kits, and...
Introduce students to qualitative analysis in the intriguing context of criminal investigation in a Toxicology Laboratory.
Learn how luminol is used in scenes like this everyday.
Discover how forensic scientists use hair to assist in solving crimes. You will discover the differences between human and animal hair as well as differences among different types of human hair....
Everyone who ate the school cafeteria’s chili became ill. Could someone have tainted the chili? You are a forensic toxicologist. It is you and your classmates’ task to determine if any of the...
Often times, during a criminal investigation, police and crime scene investigators must use all available tools and pieces of evidence to work backwards and create the most likely scenario as to...
Test for the presence of blood on materials using phenolphthalein.
Help solve the crime using thin-layer chromatography to separate the ink on the ransom note and ink found in markers tied to possible suspects.