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FALL 2002
Gary P. Aronsen
Ph. D. Candidate, Department of Anthropology, Yale University
My Hot Sexy Research in Africa: A humorous review of positional behavior, habitat structure, and the path to pedantic professionalism
Richard G. Bribiescas
Assistant Professor, Reproductive Ecology Laboratory, Department of Anthropology, Yale University
Blood, Spit, and Beers: Fieldwork Among Ache Foragers of Eastern Paraguay
Abbie Drake
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Heterochronic evolution in the morphology of canids
Elizabeth Kaplin
Director, Center for Tropical Ecology & Conservation, Department of Environmental Studies, Antioch New England Graduate School
Forest Guenons and Seed Dispersal in the Nyungwe Forest, Rwanda:past, present and future studies
Daniel J. Kevles
Stanley Woodward Professor, Department of History, Yale University
From Offense to Commonplace: Historical Reflections on the New Reproductive Technologies
Jonathan Padwe
Ph.D. Student, Joint Program, Department of Anthropology/Environmental Studies
How I learned to stop worrying and love development: human health interventions among Ache hunter-gatherers in Paraguay
Michael J. Rogers
Department of Anthropology, Southern Connecticut State University
Ethiopian Stones and Kenyan Bones: Recent Field Observations of the Early Early Stone Age
Anne Yoder
Associate Professor, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University
Time and Space in Madagascar: What we can learn from trees and mammals
SPRING 2003
Anthony DiFiore
Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, New York University
Molecular Ecology of Woolly Monkeys
Clifford Jolly
Professor, Department of Anthropology, New York University
Baboons, hybrids & species
Laurie Santos
Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Yale University
The features that guide them: how rhesus monkeys categorize foods and tools
Simone Teelen
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Anthropology, Yale University
Morituri te salutant: Red colobus monkeys at Ngogo
David P. Watts
Professor, Department of Anthropology, Yale University
What Does It Mean That Chimpanzees Kill Other Chimpanzees?
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