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      Acheulean variability and hominin dispersals: a model-bound approach

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      Journal of Archaeological Science
      Elsevier BV

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          Demography and Cultural Evolution: How Adaptive Cultural Processes can Produce Maladaptive Losses: The Tasmanian Case

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            Orangutan cultures and the evolution of material culture.

            Geographic variation in some aspects of chimpanzee behavior has been interpreted as evidence for culture. Here we document similar geographic variation in orangutan behaviors. Moreover, as expected under a cultural interpretation, we find a correlation between geographic distance and cultural difference, a correlation between the abundance of opportunities for social learning and the size of the local cultural repertoire, and no effect of habitat on the content of culture. Hence, great-ape cultures exist, and may have done so for at least 14 million years.
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              Conformity to cultural norms of tool use in chimpanzees.

              Rich circumstantial evidence suggests that the extensive behavioural diversity recorded in wild great apes reflects a complexity of cultural variation unmatched by species other than our own. However, the capacity for cultural transmission assumed by this interpretation has remained difficult to test rigorously in the field, where the scope for controlled experimentation is limited. Here we show that experimentally introduced technologies will spread within different ape communities. Unobserved by group mates, we first trained a high-ranking female from each of two groups of captive chimpanzees to adopt one of two different tool-use techniques for obtaining food from the same 'Pan-pipe' apparatus, then re-introduced each female to her respective group. All but two of 32 chimpanzees mastered the new technique under the influence of their local expert, whereas none did so in a third population lacking an expert. Most chimpanzees adopted the method seeded in their group, and these traditions continued to diverge over time. A subset of chimpanzees that discovered the alternative method nevertheless went on to match the predominant approach of their companions, showing a conformity bias that is regarded as a hallmark of human culture.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Archaeological Science
                Journal of Archaeological Science
                Elsevier BV
                03054403
                March 2008
                March 2008
                : 35
                : 3
                : 553-562
                Article
                10.1016/j.jas.2007.05.003
                a02ad25e-6820-4c89-b91e-2a9d44275daf
                © 2008

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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