Arthur Kollmann

Arthur Kollmann (1858–1941)[1] was a German medical researcher from Hamburg who studied the fingerprint characteristics of friction ridges and volar pads.[2]

In the 1880s (1883, 1885), Kollmann was the first researcher to address the formation of friction ridges on the fetus and the random physical stresses and tensions which may have played a part in their growth.[2]

Kollmann may have been the first researcher to study the development of friction ridges.[2] He grouped the volar pads of humans and also grouped the volar pads of many primates. Kollmann is credited with establishing and then naming ten volar pads in humans, and he was the first to study epidermic markings in different races. Alfred R. Hale described Kollmann as the first researcher (1883) to suggest that mechanical stresses inherent in fetal growth may influence the ultimate dermatoglyphic configuration.

He is buried in the Nordfriedhof, Leipzig.

Notes

  1. "Felix Martin Oberländers Beiträge zur Urologie" (PDF file), SpringerLink, part of Springer Science+Business Media, 2006, webpage: Springer-PDF.
  2. "Michele Triplett's Fingerprint Dictionary: K" (glossary), Michele Triplett, 2006, Fprints.nwlean.net webpage: Fprints-K Archived 2006-10-16 at the Wayback Machine.
gollark: A hilariously slow one, admittedly.
gollark: HA. My incredibly janky method worked and I have a terminal open on the server.
gollark: I have decided to manually download the relevant packages from the Alpine mirrors.
gollark: Why does this server not even have an SSH client installed what even oh beeoids.
gollark: No idea.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.