Having few living stone-tool-using communities on which to rely, archeologists must refer to experimental research to understand how stone tools were used and how these uses impacted the human body's evolution. These observations help to establish parameters of variation that we can compare to and tested against the archaeological and fossil records to better understand prehistoric behavioral and anatomical variability
Having few living stone-tool-using communities on which to rely, archeologists must refer to experimental research to understand how stone tools were used and how these uses impacted the human body's evolution. These observations help to establish parameters of variation that we can compare to and tested against the archaeological and fossil records to better understand prehistoric behavioral and anatomical variability
Click on the links below to learn more about the lab and its collaborators ongoing research on tool use and biomechanics.
Click on the links below to learn more about the lab and its collaborators ongoing research on tool use and biomechanics.