DiscoverYear of Kenya Lecture Series (2006-2007)Hand-Axes, Hominids, and Hippos: What Stone Tools can tell us about Early Hominid Behavior
Hand-Axes, Hominids, and Hippos: What Stone Tools can tell us about Early Hominid Behavior

Hand-Axes, Hominids, and Hippos: What Stone Tools can tell us about Early Hominid Behavior

Update: 2007-01-11
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BIO: Bruce Hardy, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Kenyon College. Bruce Hardy holds a B.A. in Anthropology and French from Emory University and M.A. and Ph.D. in Anthropology from Indiana University. He is part of the Environmental Studies faculty at Kenyon and teaches course on human ecology and human variation. Trained in paleoanthropology, he has worked extensively on the Paleolithic of Europe and Africa, particularly with early hominids and Neandertals. Recently, his research has focused on understanding the behavioral changes associated with the transition from Neandertals to modern humans.
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Hand-Axes, Hominids, and Hippos: What Stone Tools can tell us about Early Hominid Behavior

Hand-Axes, Hominids, and Hippos: What Stone Tools can tell us about Early Hominid Behavior

Bruce Hardy, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Kenyon College