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What is the fastes frowing crime in America? |
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What are the six steps of the sccientific method that forms a basis for legitimate scientific and engineering processes? |
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Definition
Recongnize the need, f=define the problem, collect data, analyze the data, develop a hypothesis. (5) |
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Term
Information that is based upon observations or experience and can be verified is called what? |
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Definition
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What is the primary goal of a fire investigator? |
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Definition
To determine the truth (6) |
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What is the secondary goal of the fire investgator? |
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Definition
To identify and move against those responsible for arson. (6) |
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______is an inner drive or impulse that causes a person to do something or to act in a certain way. |
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______is marked by mood elevation, physical and mental hyperactivity, and disorgannized behavior. |
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_____may involve lethargy, lack of concintration, and sadness or dejection. |
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A person who has an inordinate or ungovernable enthusiasm for starting fires, who lacks a concious motivation for his fire setting in known as what? |
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Of the affected disorders which one is the most serious? |
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An action usually involving the placement of a bomb or fire explosion of great destructive power, which is capable of effecting irreparable loss against the enemy, is called what? |
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What is most important to any investigator? |
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Term
What are the five nationally recongized types of biulding construction? |
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Definition
Fire-resistive, non-combustible or limitied combustible, ordinary construction, heavy timber, wood frame. (29) |
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Term
T/F
Masonry, plaster, and drywall construction offer resistance to fire attack, while wood studs, and wood paneling, and plywood products can greatly increase a fires intensity and acutally add to the fire load. |
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Under heavy fire conditions a fire investigator may expect a wall to collapse in an average of how many mins? |
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Term
Under heavy fire conditions an investigator can expect a floor to collapse in how many mins? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the total weight of the building plus the total weight of all permenent or built-in equipment known as? |
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Definition
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The total weight of those items added to the building, including all furnishing, stock and sotrage, and occupantsis known as what? |
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How much does one gallon of water weigh? |
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Definition
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The load that is brought to bear in a short period of time if called what? |
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Term
The total number of BTU that might evolve during a fire, and the rate at which heat will evolve is called |
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Definition
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One pound of wood, if completly burned, produces how many BTU? |
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Definition
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Term
A fire in any given area that would be virtually restricted to that area is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
A______is a wall designed to prevent the extension of a fire. |
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Definition
Dividing parapet, also known as a parapet, firewall, or party wall (35) |
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Term
A_____is usually made of metal and designed to prevent the spread of fire through doorways or other wall openings. |
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Definition
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Term
What is the universally recongized characteristic of a fireproof or fire-resistive construction? |
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Definition
The building will restrict a fire to one floor or other limite area (36) |
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Term
How is the central core design of a building characterized? |
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Definition
By having all utilities, elevator shafts, stariwells, air conditioning ducts, and electrical, plumbing, and telephone lines, located and passing vertically through each floor in the central core of the building. (37) |
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Term
A large open area extending over head from the lobby for at least several stories and possibly to the roof is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
When should elevators be used to evacuate a building in the event of a fire? |
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Definition
Never, an elevator shaft makes a very effective chimmney (39) |
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Term
A stairway enclosed in a separate structure that has its own exterior walls is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 2 basic classifications of fire detectors? |
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Definition
Smoke detectors and heat detectors (41) |
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Term
What are the four common types of sprinkler systems?
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Definition
Wet pipe, dry pipe, preaction and deluge (46) |
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Term
In what kind of sprinkler system do the supply pipes to the sprinkler head contain water at all times? |
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Definition
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Term
In what kind of sprinkler system do the supply pipes contained compressed air and not water? |
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A_____is special tile for walls and ceilings, made of mineral, wood vegatable fibers, cord, or metal, whose purpose is to control sound volume while providing cover. |
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A pipe that carries warm/cold air to rooms and back to a furnace/air conditioning system is called what? |
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An______is a unit for measuring the rate of flow of elecricity (current) |
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A paved area such as the junction of a driveway with the street or with a garage entrance is called what? |
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What is gravel or earth replaced in the space around a building wall after foundations are in place? |
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Upright support of a balustrade rail is called what? |
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One of the principal horizontal wood or steel members of a building is called what? |
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A______is a projecting beam or joist not supported at one end, used to support an extension of a structure. |
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Term
What safety device opens an electrical circuit automatically when it becomes overload? |
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Definition
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Extension of a roof beyond the house walls are called what? |
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Definition
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Term
What kind of roof has 2 piticches, steeper on its lower slope and flatter toward the ridge designed to provide more space on upper floors? |
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What kind of roof slants up on 3 or 4 sides? |
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Definition
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Term
A horizontal piece over a door or window that supports walls above the opening is called what? |
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A projection of the foundation wall used to support a floor girder or stiffen the wall is called a_____ |
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A chemical process accompanied by the evolution of heat and light is called what? |
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________is the energy possesed by a material or substance due to molecular activity. |
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What is the measurement of the realtive amount of heat energy contained within a given substance called? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 5 ways to produce heat? |
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Definition
Chemical, mecahnical, electrical, compressed gas, and nuclear (58) |
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Term
What are the 3 ways to transfer heat? |
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Definition
conduction, convection, and radiation (58) |
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Term
_______is the transfer of heat by a circulating medium, ussually air or a liquid. |
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Of the 3 methods of heat transfer which is chiefly responsible for the spread of fire in structures? |
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Of the 3 methods of heat transfer which has direct contact as its underlying factor? |
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Definition
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______is the uniform distribution, seemingly in contradictionto the laws of gravity, of molecules of one substance through those of another. |
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_______means that other substances may pass through or permeate a gas. |
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Definition
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The temperature at which a liquid turns into gas by producing continous vapor bubbles is called its what? |
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The temperature at which a liquid gives off enough vapor to form an ignitable mixture is called what? |
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Term
The temperature at which a liquid produces vapors that will sustain combustion is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
NFPA defines a flammable liquid as oe whose flash point is below how many degrees? |
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Definition
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Term
A liquid with a flash point of 140 degrees or higher is a______ |
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Definition
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Term
The temperature at which a solid turns into a liquid is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
The chemical decompistion of matter through the action of heat is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
This is the amount of heat that a fuel will release during a complete oxidation reaction. |
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Definition
The heat of combustion (65) |
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Term
The temperature at which a flammable material will ignite is called what? |
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Definition
Ignition temperature (66) |
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Term
The temperature to which a material must be heated in order for it to burst into flame, free of an ignition source such a spark or a match is called what? |
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Definition
Autoignition temperature. (66) |
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Term
The lowest temperature at which an oxidation reaction can self-sustain itself to either flamming or glowing ignition is called what? |
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Definition
Autogenous ignition temperature (66) |
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Term
The value assigned to the rate of chemical reaction which doubles with every 10 degrees Celcius or 18 dgrees F increase in temperature is_______ |
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Definition
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Term
_______is the weight of a a substance compared with an equal volum of water |
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Definition
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A substance that ignites spontaneoulsy in air at normal temperatures is called______ |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 4 classifications of fire by fuel? |
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Definition
Class A=ordinary combusitbles
Class B= flammable or combusitble liquids
Class C= Energized electrical equipment
Class D= combustible metals (67) |
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Term
As a fire progresses it normally passes through 4 phases what are they? |
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Definition
Incipient, emergent smoldering, free burning, and oxygen-regulated smoldering (68) |
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Term
_____is defined as a stage in the developement of a contained fire in which all exposed surfaces reach igntion temperature, more or less simulltaneously, and fire apreads rapidly. |
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Definition
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What is the actual average time to flashover? |
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Definition
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Term
_______is defined as a stage in the development of a contained fire in which all exposed surfaces reach ignition temperature more or less simultaneously and fire spreads rapidly. |
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Definition
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Term
Carbon monoxide is highly flammable and has an ignition temperature of______ |
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Definition
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Term
Heat from a fire in the open rises as a column of hot gas called what? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the four components of the fire tetrahedron? |
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Definition
Fuel, oxygen, heat, and chemical chain reaction (79) |
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Term
The cause of a a fire can be catergorized into one of foru classifications, what are they? |
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Definition
Natural, accidentl, undetermined, and incindiary (91) |
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Term
What does the term prima facie mean? |
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Definition
Eveidence that the fire was of incendiary origin (98) |
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Term
The physical sign and substances that reveal, by implication, how a fire developed are referred to as what? |
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Definition
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Term
______refers to the crack of glass into smaller segments or subdivisions in an irregular pattern. |
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Definition
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Term
If the fire is considered supicious, the officer should immediatley request the assistance of a fire investigator. In the case of a fatal fire, whom should he also request? |
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Definition
A police investigator (193) |
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Term
Who is the person responsible for perserving the interigity of the fire scene until the first investigator arrives? |
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Definition
The chief fire officer (193) |
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Term
When the investigator arrives, what should the chief officer give him? |
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Definition
A chronologic list of all authourized persons entering the crime scene (193) |
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Term
Although lividity begins at death, when does it become visible? |
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Definition
30 mins to 4 hours later. (204) |
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Term
A victim may be found in what appears to be a defensive boxing pose or fetal postion. What is this position called? |
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Definition
Pugilistic attitude (204) |
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Term
What is rigor mortis visible? |
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Definition
In the face, jaws, and hands (206) |
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Term
How long does it take for rigor mortis to develop? |
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Definition
2 to 4 hours, and complete over a period of 12 to 24 hours from death (206) |
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Term
Who is responsible for determining the fires origin and cause? |
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Definition
The fire investigator (209) |
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Term
Who is responsible for the death investigation? |
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Definition
The police investigator (209) |
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Term
What is the single most common cause of death in fires? |
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Definition
Carbon monoxide asphyxiation (211) |
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Term
Exposure to as little as____% carbon monoxied can cause unconsciousness after only two or three breaths, and death in a few minutes. |
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Definition
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Term
Who is responsible for conducting the follow up investigation of fatal fires? |
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Definition
The police investigator (214) |
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Term
At what ceiling temperature does flashover occur? |
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Definition
932 to 1112 degrees (227) |
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Term
A fire that is deliberatley set under circumstances when the person who is seting ithe fire realizes that the fire should not be set is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
Steel will soften and fail at what temperatures? |
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Definition
It softens at 1000 degrees and may fail between 1500 and 1700 degrees (259) |
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Term
The normal operating catalytic converter ranges in temperature from what to what? |
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Definition
800 to 1800 degrees (261) |
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Term
What two gases do vehicle batteries contain? |
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Definition
Oxygen and hydrogen (268) |
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Term
A_______, sometimes referred to as a booster, is either a pool of liquid accelerant or a pile of combustibles that is used by an arsonist to enhance the quality of fire in a selected location |
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Definition
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Term
A_____, sometimes referred to as a streamer, is and arrangment or configuration of flammable or combustible materials that is intended to carry fire from one location to another. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the four ways to gain entry into a particular structure in order to conduct an investigation? |
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Definition
Extigent circumstances, consent of property owner, administrative search warrant, criminal search warrant (279) |
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Term
In gaining entry to a particular structure to investigate, which method is generally recongnized when fire department personnel enter a building or structure to supress and extinguish a fire? |
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Definition
Exigent circumstances (279) |
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Term
Any agent, frequently an ignitable or flammable liquid, used to initiate or speed the spread of fire is called what? |
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Definition
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Term
In a fire investigation what should the crime include? |
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Definition
The area surronding the location where a crime may have been committed and where evidence pertaining to the investigation of that crime may be found (330) |
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Term
The area of the crime scene evincing the greatest impact between the criminal and the commision of the crime is known as what? |
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Definition
The seat of the crime (330) |
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