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Sarah Calcutt , M.S. Sarah Calcutt received her BS in zoology from Miami University in 2001 and her M.S. in wildlife medicine from St. George’s University in Grenada W.I. Her master’s work involved human elephant interactions in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda. She is currently the tool-use intern for the Lester E. Fisher Center for African Apes. Sarah conducts research on great ape cognition and behavior through the center’s termite fishing and space use studies. Publications McGrew, W.C., Marchant, L.F., Scott, S.E., and Tutin, C.E.G. 2001. Intergroup differences in social custom of wild chimpanzees: The grooming hand-clasp of the Mahale Mountains, Tanzania. Current Anthropology 42: 148-153. McGrew, W.C., Bladwin, P.J., Marchant, L.F., Pruetz, J.D., Scott, S.E., and Tutin C.E.G. 2003. Ethnoarchaeology and elementary technology of unhabituated wild chimpanzees at Assirik, Senegal. Paleoanthropology 1: 1-20. |