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The Use of Tools by Human and Non-human Primates

A Berthelet editor J Chavaillon editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:25th Mar '93

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Use of Tools by Human and Non-human Primates cover

This volume brings together contributions on the theme of tools from international specialists in various disciplines - anatomists, neurobiologists, prehistorians, ethnologists, and primatologists - at a symposium arranged by the Fyssen Foundation. Tools, whether of stone, wood, or metal, are a prolongation of the arm, but they acquire precision through the hand directed by the brain. A movement may have been identical from one another, in apes and in humans, in the past and in the present, but the resulting action varies according to the extended use of the tool. It is therefore necessary to understand the origin of tools, and also to be able to describe the techniques of cutting tools, and to imagine the possible uses of certain tools. Comparison of the techniques of chimpanzees with those of prehistoric Man and of twentieth-century Man has made it possible to appreciate the common aspects and to identify the differences. The transmission of ability, and of the understanding also called apprenticeship, has been studied in the various relevant societies: chimpanzees in their natural habitat and in captivity, hunter-gatherers, and workmen in prehistoric and in modern times.

'this compendium includes some informative chapters on assorted topics relating to tool use in nonhuman and human primates' Sandra T. deBlois, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, American Journal of Primatology 33

ISBN: 9780198522638

Dimensions: 237mm x 162mm x 30mm

Weight: 818g

448 pages