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  2. Forensic footwear evidence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensic_footwear_evidence

    It must also be considered that footprints discovered at a crime scene remain fixed, while the wearer of the footwear continues on likely changing the wear of the shoe. Thus, unless the print is immediately matched its potential value may be lost. Also of concern is the lack of science and standards demonstrating that footwear marks are unique.

  3. Footprint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Footprint

    Footprints are the impressions or images left behind by a person walking or running. Hoofprints and pawprints are those left by animals with hooves or paws rather than feet, while "shoeprints" is the specific term for prints made by shoes. They may either be indentations in the ground or something placed onto the surface that was stuck to the ...

  4. Meister Print - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meister_Print

    The Meister Print (also known as the Meister Footprint) refers to two trilobites in slate that appeared to be crushed in a human shoe print. The print was cited by creationists and other pseudoscience advocates as an out-of-place artifact, but was debunked by palaeontologists as the result of a natural geologic process known as spall formation.

  5. Poulaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poulaine

    The poulaine proper was a shoe or boot of soft material whose elongated toe (also known as a poulaine or pike) frequently required filling to maintain its shape. The chief vogue for poulaines spread across Europe from medieval Poland in the mid-14th century and spread across Europe, reaching upper-class England with the 1382 marriage of Richard ...

  6. J.W. Foster and Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J.W._Foster_and_Sons

    J W Foster & Sons (Athletic Shoes) Limited was an athletic shoe manufacturing company located in Bolton, England. Established by Joseph W. Foster in 1895, the company was a pioneer in the use of track spikes for runners and athletes, producing most of the highly-regarded running shoes in the 1920s.

  7. Petrosomatoglyph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrosomatoglyph

    The best preserved footprint [44] is 27 cm long, nearly 11 cm wide, 9 cm across at the heel and 2.5 cm deep; so large that it would fit a foot clothed in a shoe or boot. [ 28 ] [ 43 ] A second, incomplete footprint is a lightly pecked outline of a shod right foot, 24 cm long and 10 cm in maximum width.

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