Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution

The chimpanzee, of all other living species, is our closest relation, with whom we last shared a common ancestor about 5 million years ago. These African apes make and use a rich and varied kit of tools, and of the primates they are the only consistent and habitual tool-users and tool-makers. Chimpa...

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1. Verfasser: McGrew, William C. 1944- (VerfasserIn)
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Veröffentlicht: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1992
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505 8 0 |t Patterns of culture?  |t The prey  |t Six key sites  |t Other sites  |t Non-human culture?  |t Studying chimpanzees  |t Development of chimpanzee research  |t Studies in nature  |t Studies in capitivity  |t Sites of study  |t Eastern chimpanzees  |t Central-western chimpanzees  |t Western chimpanzees  |t Captive chimpanzees  |t Methods of study  |t Studies in nature  |t Methodological issues  |t Studies in capitivity  |t Collecting data  |t Chimpanzees as apes  |t Sources and methods  |t Patterns of tool-use  |t Chimpanzee  |t Bonobo  |t Orang-utan  |t Highland gorilla  |t Lowland gorilla  |t Gibbon  |t Socio-ecology  |t Brain  |t Hands  |t Mind  |t Apes and their tools  |t Ancestral hominoids  |t Cultured chimpanzees?  |t Gombe and Kasoje compared  |t Case study: Grooming  |t Defining culture  |t Japanese macaques  |t Additional conditions for culture  |t Chimpanzees as culture-bearers?  |t Culture denied?  |t Chimpanzee sexes  |t Sex or gender? An aside  |t Sex differences in diet: invertebrates  |t Case study: Termite-fishing  |t Chimpanzees, tools and termites  |t Case study: Ant-dipping  |t Chimpanzees and ants  |t Sex differences in diet: meat  |t Case study: Mammals as prey  |t Carnivory elsewhere  |t Sex and faunivory  |t Nut-cracking  |t Food-sharing  |t Case-study: Banana-sharing  |t Other food sharing  |t Other apes  |t Origins of sexual division of labour  |t Origins of tool-use  |t Chimpanzees and foragers  |t Cautionary note  |t Why compare chimpanzees and hunter-gatherers?  |t Ideal versus actual comparisons 
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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any_adam_object
author McGrew, William C. 1944-
author_GND (DE-588)132608286
author_facet McGrew, William C. 1944-
author_role aut
author_sort McGrew, William C. 1944-
author_variant w c m wc wcm
building Verbundindex
bvnumber BV043945678
classification_rvk CZ 8000
WS 6000
WT 2039
collection ZDB-20-CBO
contents Patterns of culture?
The prey
Six key sites
Other sites
Non-human culture?
Studying chimpanzees
Development of chimpanzee research
Studies in nature
Studies in capitivity
Sites of study
Eastern chimpanzees
Central-western chimpanzees
Western chimpanzees
Captive chimpanzees
Methods of study
Methodological issues
Collecting data
Chimpanzees as apes
Sources and methods
Patterns of tool-use
Chimpanzee
Bonobo
Orang-utan
Highland gorilla
Lowland gorilla
Gibbon
Socio-ecology
Brain
Hands
Mind
Apes and their tools
Ancestral hominoids
Cultured chimpanzees?
Gombe and Kasoje compared
Case study: Grooming
Defining culture
Japanese macaques
Additional conditions for culture
Chimpanzees as culture-bearers?
Culture denied?
Chimpanzee sexes
Sex or gender? An aside
Sex differences in diet: invertebrates
Case study: Termite-fishing
Chimpanzees, tools and termites
Case study: Ant-dipping
Chimpanzees and ants
Sex differences in diet: meat
Case study: Mammals as prey
Carnivory elsewhere
Sex and faunivory
Nut-cracking
Food-sharing
Case-study: Banana-sharing
Other food sharing
Other apes
Origins of sexual division of labour
Origins of tool-use
Chimpanzees and foragers
Cautionary note
Why compare chimpanzees and hunter-gatherers?
Ideal versus actual comparisons
ctrlnum (ZDB-20-CBO)CR9780511565519
(OCoLC)849894411
(DE-599)BVBBV043945678
dewey-full 599.88/440451
dewey-hundreds 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics
dewey-ones 599 - Mammalia
dewey-raw 599.88/440451
dewey-search 599.88/440451
dewey-sort 3599.88 6440451
dewey-tens 590 - Animals
discipline Biologie
Psychologie
doi_str_mv 10.1017/CBO9780511565519
format Electronic
eBook
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illustrated Not Illustrated
indexdate 2024-07-10T07:39:24Z
institution BVB
isbn 9780511565519
language English
oai_aleph_id oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029354649
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spelling McGrew, William C. 1944- (DE-588)132608286 aut
Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution W. C. McGrew
Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1992
1 online resource (XVI, 277 Seiten)
txt rdacontent
c rdamedia
cr rdacarrier
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)
Patterns of culture? The prey Six key sites Other sites Non-human culture? Studying chimpanzees Development of chimpanzee research Studies in nature Studies in capitivity Sites of study Eastern chimpanzees Central-western chimpanzees Western chimpanzees Captive chimpanzees Methods of study Studies in nature Methodological issues Studies in capitivity Collecting data Chimpanzees as apes Sources and methods Patterns of tool-use Chimpanzee Bonobo Orang-utan Highland gorilla Lowland gorilla Gibbon Socio-ecology Brain Hands Mind Apes and their tools Ancestral hominoids Cultured chimpanzees? Gombe and Kasoje compared Case study: Grooming Defining culture Japanese macaques Additional conditions for culture Chimpanzees as culture-bearers? Culture denied? Chimpanzee sexes Sex or gender? An aside Sex differences in diet: invertebrates Case study: Termite-fishing Chimpanzees, tools and termites Case study: Ant-dipping Chimpanzees and ants Sex differences in diet: meat Case study: Mammals as prey Carnivory elsewhere Sex and faunivory Nut-cracking Food-sharing Case-study: Banana-sharing Other food sharing Other apes Origins of sexual division of labour Origins of tool-use Chimpanzees and foragers Cautionary note Why compare chimpanzees and hunter-gatherers? Ideal versus actual comparisons
The chimpanzee, of all other living species, is our closest relation, with whom we last shared a common ancestor about 5 million years ago. These African apes make and use a rich and varied kit of tools, and of the primates they are the only consistent and habitual tool-users and tool-makers. Chimpanzees meet the criteria of culture as originally defined for human beings by socio-cultural anthropologists. They show sex differences in using tools to obtain and to process a variety of plant and animal foods. The technological gap between chimpanzees and human societies that live by foraging (hunter-gatherers) is surprisingly narrow, at least for food-getting. Different communities of wild chimpanzees have different tool-kits, and not all of this regional and local variation can be explained by the demands of the physical and biotic environments in which they live. Some differences are likely to be customs based on socially derived and symbolically encoded traditions. Chimpanzees serve as heuristic, referential models for the reconstruction of cultural evolution in apes and humans from a common ancestor. However, chimpanzees are not humans, and key differences exist between them, though many of these apparent contrasts remain to be explored empirically and theoretically
Chimpanzees / Behavior
Tool use in animals
Human evolution
Social evolution
Material culture
Hunting and gathering societies
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Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe 978-0-521-41303-9
Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe 978-0-521-42371-7
https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511565519 Verlag URL des Erstveröffentlichers Volltext
1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk
2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk
3\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk
spellingShingle McGrew, William C. 1944-
Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution
Patterns of culture?
The prey
Six key sites
Other sites
Non-human culture?
Studying chimpanzees
Development of chimpanzee research
Studies in nature
Studies in capitivity
Sites of study
Eastern chimpanzees
Central-western chimpanzees
Western chimpanzees
Captive chimpanzees
Methods of study
Methodological issues
Collecting data
Chimpanzees as apes
Sources and methods
Patterns of tool-use
Chimpanzee
Bonobo
Orang-utan
Highland gorilla
Lowland gorilla
Gibbon
Socio-ecology
Brain
Hands
Mind
Apes and their tools
Ancestral hominoids
Cultured chimpanzees?
Gombe and Kasoje compared
Case study: Grooming
Defining culture
Japanese macaques
Additional conditions for culture
Chimpanzees as culture-bearers?
Culture denied?
Chimpanzee sexes
Sex or gender? An aside
Sex differences in diet: invertebrates
Case study: Termite-fishing
Chimpanzees, tools and termites
Case study: Ant-dipping
Chimpanzees and ants
Sex differences in diet: meat
Case study: Mammals as prey
Carnivory elsewhere
Sex and faunivory
Nut-cracking
Food-sharing
Case-study: Banana-sharing
Other food sharing
Other apes
Origins of sexual division of labour
Origins of tool-use
Chimpanzees and foragers
Cautionary note
Why compare chimpanzees and hunter-gatherers?
Ideal versus actual comparisons
Chimpanzees / Behavior
Tool use in animals
Human evolution
Social evolution
Material culture
Hunting and gathering societies
Schimpanse (DE-588)4179632-9 gnd
Verhalten (DE-588)4062860-7 gnd
Werkzeug (DE-588)4065596-9 gnd
Sozialverhalten (DE-588)4055903-8 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4179632-9
(DE-588)4062860-7
(DE-588)4065596-9
(DE-588)4055903-8
title Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution
title_alt Patterns of culture?
The prey
Six key sites
Other sites
Non-human culture?
Studying chimpanzees
Development of chimpanzee research
Studies in nature
Studies in capitivity
Sites of study
Eastern chimpanzees
Central-western chimpanzees
Western chimpanzees
Captive chimpanzees
Methods of study
Methodological issues
Collecting data
Chimpanzees as apes
Sources and methods
Patterns of tool-use
Chimpanzee
Bonobo
Orang-utan
Highland gorilla
Lowland gorilla
Gibbon
Socio-ecology
Brain
Hands
Mind
Apes and their tools
Ancestral hominoids
Cultured chimpanzees?
Gombe and Kasoje compared
Case study: Grooming
Defining culture
Japanese macaques
Additional conditions for culture
Chimpanzees as culture-bearers?
Culture denied?
Chimpanzee sexes
Sex or gender? An aside
Sex differences in diet: invertebrates
Case study: Termite-fishing
Chimpanzees, tools and termites
Case study: Ant-dipping
Chimpanzees and ants
Sex differences in diet: meat
Case study: Mammals as prey
Carnivory elsewhere
Sex and faunivory
Nut-cracking
Food-sharing
Case-study: Banana-sharing
Other food sharing
Other apes
Origins of sexual division of labour
Origins of tool-use
Chimpanzees and foragers
Cautionary note
Why compare chimpanzees and hunter-gatherers?
Ideal versus actual comparisons
title_auth Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution
title_exact_search Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution
title_full Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution W. C. McGrew
title_fullStr Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution W. C. McGrew
title_full_unstemmed Chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution W. C. McGrew
title_short Chimpanzee material culture
title_sort chimpanzee material culture implications for human evolution
title_sub implications for human evolution
topic Chimpanzees / Behavior
Tool use in animals
Human evolution
Social evolution
Material culture
Hunting and gathering societies
Schimpanse (DE-588)4179632-9 gnd
Verhalten (DE-588)4062860-7 gnd
Werkzeug (DE-588)4065596-9 gnd
Sozialverhalten (DE-588)4055903-8 gnd
topic_facet Chimpanzees / Behavior
Tool use in animals
Human evolution
Social evolution
Material culture
Hunting and gathering societies
Schimpanse
Verhalten
Werkzeug
Sozialverhalten
url https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511565519
work_keys_str_mv AT mcgrewwilliamc chimpanzeematerialcultureimplicationsforhumanevolution