澳门六合彩资料库 Davis anthropologists are studying the stone age of capuchin monkeys living on tropical islands off Panama. This 'primate archaeology' is a new approach to archaeology which could give insight into how our own ancestors started using stone tools.
In 2004, Alicia Ib谩帽ez wrote a book about the plant life of Coiba National Park (on the islands of Coiba and Jicar贸n, Panama) and noted in passing that some capuchin monkeys on the islands used rocks to break open nuts and shellfish. Anthropologists interested in the evolution of tool use, including Professor Nicholas Zwyns at 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis, took notice.
Although other non-human primates, including chimpanzees and rhesus macaques, use stone tools, this is the only example in this species, white-faced capuchins. And even in Coiba national park, it's unusual.
鈥淭hose islands are the only place in the world where this particular species of monkey is known to use stone tools and it鈥檚 really concentrated in two little populations,鈥 said Meredith Carlson, a Ph.D. candidate at 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis working with Zwyns.
Carlson is studying the development of stone tool use among these monkeys. Why do some animals pick up stone tools? How does it spread within groups? Perhaps most curiously, why don't all the monkeys on the island do this? The answers could inform how we think about human archaeology.
鈥淥ne of the really cool opportunities of studying living primates is you actually watch how one thing becomes the other,鈥 Carlson said. 鈥淲e get to see how some behavior captured on video turns into a pile of nutshells and stones over months and years. We can sort of test out, does the archaeological record really form the way we assume it does.鈥
Read more about this work at the .
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(College of Letters and Science magazine)