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Monitoring ‘monkey’ molars

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Caren B. Les, [email protected]

How do you study chimp tooth development in the wild without disturbing the chimpanzees’ behavior? It may not be an age-old anthropological question, but it’s important nonetheless. Understanding dental development in chimps, our closest genetic relatives, could shed light on the evolution of human development. Harvard University researchers teamed up with wildlife photographers to capture detailed photos of the mouths of individual chimps in Uganda’s Kibale National Park for nearly two years, allowing the researchers to track when the chimps’ molars erupted, and...Read full article

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    Published: April 2013
    AmericasAndrew B. BernardBiophotonicscamerasCaren B. LeschimpanzeesConsumerdental development wildlife photographydigital nature photographyDSLR camerasHarvard UniversityImagingKibale National ParkMassachusettsmolar developmentmonkeysOpticsPNASPostscriptsProceedings of the National Academy of SciencesRonan M. DonovanTanya M. SmithUganda

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