Chinchilla Hair
                This is a hair from the Cargille animal hair standards kit.
                  This shows how the medulla disappears near the tip and
                  how the scale count increases significantly. It also show the pigment distribution
                  typical of the end of the hair. Notice that the hair tapers
                  very gradually.
                
              
              
                Transmitted 20 Degrees Off Crossed Circular Polarized Light
                
Definition/Function:
                Significance in the Environment:
                Characteristic Features:
                Chinchilla hair is about 10 to 15 micrometers wide from the root (narrow) to the main
                body (wide). It begins with a uniserial ladder medulla
                which changes to biserial or aeroform in the thicker regions. The pigment bodies are
                concentrated in the medulla in clumps between the areole
                vesicles over most of the hair but toward the tip the medulla disappears and the pigment
                bodies are visible elongated clumps and lines. The
                cortex is quite narrow. The cuticle pattern tends to be simple coronal and has a scale
                count of about 4 per 100 micrometers.
                Chinchilla hair has a refractive index along its length of about 1.56 and perpendicular
                to its length of about 1.55.
                It has a birefringence of about 0.01 and a positive sign of elongation.
                Associated Particles:
                References:
                References with Photographs and/or Drawings
                Hausman, Leon Augustus, "Structural charactreistics of the hair of mammals", THE
                AMERICAN NATURALIST, vol. 54, no. 635, pp.496-523, 
                Hausman, Leon Augustus, "Recent studies of hair structure relationships", THE SCIENTIFIC
                MONTHLY, pp. 258-277, 
                Glaister, John, A STUDY OF HAIRS AND WOOLS, Misr Press, Cairo, 1931.
                FBI site for Animal Hair Identification:
                http://www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/july2004/research/2004_03_research02.htm
                Keys Only
                Mayer, William V., "The hair of California mammals with keys to the dorsal guard hairs
                of California mammals", THE AMERICAN MIDLAND NATURALIST,
                vol. 48, no. 2, pp. 480-512, 1952.
                Stains, Howard J., "Field key to guard hair of middle western furbearers", JOURNAL OF
                WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, vol. 22, no.1, pp. 95-97, January, 1958.
                Mathiak, Harold A., "A key to hairs of the mammals of southern Michigan", JOURNAL OF
                WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 251-268, October, 1938.