Orang-utan tool-use at Tanjung Puting Reserve, Central Indonesian Borneo (Kalimantan Tengah)
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Cited by (57)
Clavicle length, throwing performance and the reconstruction of the Homo erectus shoulder
2015, Journal of Human EvolutionCitation Excerpt :High speed throwing is one potentially important behavior enabled by shifts in shoulder anatomy. While a number of primate species throw (e.g., Goodall, 1964, 1986; Galdikas, 1982; Jordan, 1982; Nakamichi, 1999; Cleveland et al., 2003; Leca et al., 2008; Hopkins et al., 2012), humans are unique in our ability to throw objects with both tremendous accuracy and velocity. Even Pan troglodytes, which are prolific and accurate throwers (Sugiyama and Koman, 1979; Goodall, 1986; Whiten et al., 1999) with considerable strength advantages (Bauman, 1923; Finch, 1943; Walker, 2009), only reach projectile velocities that are about one-third the speed of the average human male's throw (Roach et al., 2013).
Commentary on Chapter 15: Tools for the Trees: Orangutan Arboreal Tool Use and Creativity
2015, Animal Creativity and InnovationTools for the Trees: Orangutan Arboreal Tool Use and Creativity
2015, Animal Creativity and InnovationOrangutans (Pongo spp.) may prefer tools with rigid properties to flimsy tools
2010, Journal of Comparative Psychology
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