Curriculum vitae: LINDA FRANCES MARCHANT

Office AddressHome Address

Department of Anthropology2 Beechpoint Drive

Miami UniversityOxford, OH 45056

157 Upham HallTelephone: (513) 523-9235

Oxford, OH 45056-1618

Telephone: (513) 529-1594

Fax: (513) 529-8396

Email:

Education

1981Ph.D. in Anthropology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey

1978M.A. in Anthropology, Rutgers University

1973B.A. in Anthropology with Honors, Douglass College, Rutgers University

Fellowship

7/76-7/78NIMH Predoctoral Fellowship, National Institutes of Mental Health

Interdisciplinary Research Training Program

Department of Psychiatry

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-

Rutgers Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey

Award

2004Outstanding Professor Award

Associated Student Government, Miami University

2001Visiting Research Fellow

Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution

University of St. Andrew, St. Andrews, Scotland, July - August 15

2000Best Short Film, AChimpanzee Grooming as Social Custom, Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania@, Society for Visual Anthropology, American Anthropological Association

Professional Training and Employment

7/02-presentProfessorand Chair

Department of Anthropology

Affiliate, Department of Psychology, Department of Zoology

Miami University, Oxford, OH

8/96-6/02Professor

8/92-7/96Associate Professor

8/89-7/92Assistant Professor

Department of Sociology, Gerontology, and Anthropology

Affiliate, Department of Zoology, Department of Psychology

Miami University, Oxford, Ohio

6/89-8/89Visiting Assistant Professor

1/87-8/87Department of Anthropology

6/85-12/85University of California, Berkeley

L.F. Marchant--1

1/89-5/89Visiting Assistant Professor

Department of Anthropology

San Jose State University, California

9/87-12/87Visiting Assistant Professor

Board of Studies in Anthropology

University of California, Santa Cruz

4/86-6/86Visiting Assistant Research Anthropologist

Department of Anthropology

University of California, Berkeley

1/86-4/86Visiting Assistant Professor

Department of Anthropology

University of California, San Diego

9/84-5/85Assistant Professor

Department of Anthropology

Douglass College, Rutgers University

1/84-5/84Visiting Part-Time Lecturer

9/82-5/83Department of Anthropology

Douglass College, Rutgers University

1/84-5/84Adjunct Assistant Professor

1/83-5/83Department of Human Ecology and Social Sciences

1/82-5/82Cook College, Rutgers University

9/82-12/83Cognitive Therapist

Cognitive Rehabilitation Program, UMDNJ-Rutgers Medical School

Piscataway, New Jersey

--Staff coordinator in a clinical and research program for head-trauma patients.

--Program development and implementation.

1/81-12/81Adjunct Assistant Professor

Department of Psychology

Arizona State University

1/81-12/81Postdoctoral Career Development Award

Primate Foundation of Arizona - Tempe, Arizona

L.F. Marchant--1

Research Interests

Biological anthropology; behavioral primatology; laterality of function (handedness); African apes; hominid evolution, visual anthropology.

Teaching Experience

Introduction to Anthropology (Four Fields)Primate Biology and Behavior

Foundations of Biological Anthropology Evolution of Human Behavior

Fossil Evidence for Human Evolution Human Sexuality

Human Variation Anthropology of Aging

Graduate Seminar - Biology of Social Bonds

Undergraduate Seminars - Biological Bases of Primate Behavior; Primate Reproductive

Biology and Behavior

Undergraduate Honors Seminar - Observing Primate Behavior

Professional, Committee and Administrative Service

University Service:

Miami University - University-wide

--Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, 1990-present

Miami University - College of Arts and Science

--Personnel Committee, 1997-1999

--Computer Policy Committee, 1990-1992

Miami University - Department of Anthropology

--Chair, 7/2002-present

--Faculty Advisor, Primatology Club, 1994-present

Miami University - Department of Sociology, Gerontology, and Anthropology

--Chair, Anthropology Component, 1997-1998

--Chair, Human Subjects Committee, 1989-91; 1995-96; Member 1991-95; 1996-2000

--Curriculum Committee, Member 1999-2002

--Personnel Committee, Member 1999-2002

Rutgers University -- Department of Anthropology, 1984-1985

--Curriculum Committee

--Faculty Recruitment Committee

--Academic Advisor to Undergraduate Majors

--Faculty Advisor, Undergraduate Anthropology Club

Professional organization, journal and foundations service:

American Society of Primatologists

--Publications Committee, 1982-1984

Current Anthropology -- Associate, 1991-present

Journal of Comparative Psychology -- Manuscript Reviewer, 1988, 1992, 1994, 1995

Behavioral and Brain Sciences -- Associate, 1987-2000

American Journal of Primatology -- Manuscript Reviewer, 1986-present

American Journal of Physical Anthropology BManuscript Reviewer, 2001-present

Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research -- Proposal Reviewer, 1990, 1993, 1996

National Science Foundation -- Proposal Reviewer, 1991, 1995

L.S.B. Leakey Foundation -- Proposal Reviewer, 1992-present

Chimp Haven -- Advisory Board, 1999-present

Field Research

1/00-4/00Niokolo-Koba National Park

Tambacounda, Senegal

Diet and Intestinal Parasites of Wild Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus)

8/96-12/96Mahale Mountains National Park

Mahale, Tanzania

Object Manipulation by Wild Chimpanzees: Handedness, Prehension and Performance

9/92-12/92Gombe National Park

Kigoma, Tanzania

Laterality of Limb Function in Wild Chimpanzees

7/76-11/77Lion Country Safari

West Palm Beach, Florida

Dissertation research: Hand Preference Among Captive Island Groups of Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)

Research Experience

9/94-12/94Department Of Anthropology

6/90-8/90University Of California, Berkeley

9/88-12/88Research Associate

1/88-5/88--Behavioral research on Indian langurs (Presbytis entellus)

7/86-12/86at Field Station for Behavioral Research

1/81-12/81Primate Foundation Of Arizona

--Resocialization of captive chimpanzees for breeding colony

--Design and implementation of data collection systems

--Study of infant development

6/79-6/80Department Of Psychiatry, Rutgers Medical School

--Training and supervision of students for human ethological study of geriatric patient population participating in an anti-senility drug study.

--Organization of all phases of behavioral and physiological data collection, including: mental status exams, EEG, EKG, routine labs.

Grants

External:

Max-Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany, - Behavioural Diversity in Chimpanzees and Bonobos $3,936. Spring 2001. (L.F. Marchant)

L.S.B. Leakey Foundation - Sex Differences in Faunivory in Wild Chimpanzees at Mt. Assirik, Senegal $13000. Spring 2000. (W.C. McGrew and L.F. Marchant)

L.F. Marchant--1

Forschungsstelle für Humanethologie in der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft - Comparative Research on Chimpanzees and Bonobos $3500. Summer 1995. (W.C. McGrew and L.F. Marchant)

Wenner-Gren Foundation - Publication grant for Great Ape Societies, Cambridge University Press, 1996. $10,000. Spring 1995. (W.C. McGrew, L.F. Marchant and T. Nishida)

Forschungsstelle für Humanethologie in der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft - Laterality of Limb Function in Human and Nonhuman Primates $4200. Summer 1994. (W.C. McGrew and L.F. Marchant)

Forschungsstelle für Humanethologie in der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft - Laterality of Limb Function in Traditional Human Societies: Ethological Study from Cinematic Data $7500. Summer 1993. (W.C. McGrew and L.F. Marchant)

L.S.B. Leakey Foundation - Laterality of Limb Function in Wild Chimpanzees, Gombe, Tanzania $7500. Fall 1992. (L.F. Marchant and W.C. McGrew)

Internal:

College of Arts and Science, Teaching Enhancement Grant

AShort Teaching Videos for Primate Behavior Courses@. $2500. Spring 2001

Small Grant to Improve Teaching, Office of Scholarship and Teaching

- NSF Short Course for Faculty Development, ACreation, Evolution or Both? - a Multiple Model Approach@. $273. Spring 2000

Summer Research Appointment (SRA), Committee for Faculty Research, and Research Graduate Assistantship (RGA) for study of: Diet and intestinal parasites of wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in Niokolo-Koba National Park, Senegal: Analyses of fecal specimens. $6000 and  $20,000. Fall 1999

Philip and Elaina Hampton Fund for Faculty International Initiatives - Behavioral Ecology of Wild Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) at Mt. Assirik, Senegal. $6000. Spring 1999. (L.F. Marchant and W.C. McGrew)

Philip and Elaina Hampton Fund for Faculty International Initiatives - Behavior of Wild Chimpanzees in Tanzania: Handedness, Prehension and Object Manipulation $5961. Spring 1996. (W.C. McGrew and L.F. Marchant)

Small Instructional Grant, College of Arts and Science - Faculty Development Program

- DVD Players for ATH Classroom Teaching $310. Fall 2003

- Skeletal Explorer Video-Disk $500. Fall 1993

- Ethnographic Video Collection $450. Spring 1991

- I. Chautauqua Short Course II. Current Primate References $320. Fall 1990

- Fossil Cast Collection Enhancement $408. Spring 1990

- I. Software for Primate Behavior Seminar and Paleoanthropology II. Current Primate References and Bibliographies $262. Fall 1989

L.F. Marchant--1

College of Arts and Science - Faculty Development Fund for International Travel: Academic Excellence Travel Fund

- Travel to Chimpanzee Population and Habitat Viability Workshop, Entebbe, Uganda

$432. 6-10 January 1997

- Travel to XVth Congress of the International Primatological Society, Bali,

Indonesia $800. Summer 1994

Small Research Grant, College of Arts and Science - Faculty Development Program

- Comparative Research on Chimpanzees and Bonobos $500. Spring 1997

- Research Collaboration with the University of Stirling $500. Spring 1991

College of Arts and Science - Alumni Travel Grant and Special Grant from Dean's Recovered Indirect Cost Funds $300. Fall 1990

Scripps Gerontology Center Academic Challenge Grant, Course Development Grant, Anthropology of Aging $2100. Fall 1989

Summer Research Appointment, Committee for Faculty Research, Miami University - Aging and Locomotor Behavior in Hanuman Langurs $3750. Fall 1989

Publications

Books

Boesch, C., Hohmann, G., and Marchant, L.F. eds. Behavioural Diversity in Chimpanzees and

Bonobos. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.

McGrew, W.C.,Marchant, L.F. and Nishida, T. eds. Great Ape Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge

University Press, 1996.

Chapters, Articles

Marchant, L.F.The limits of chimpanzee charity: Strategies of meat sharing in communities of wild

apes. In: Welfare, Ethnicity, and Altruism: Bringing in Evolutionary Theory, F. Salter, ed. London: Frank Cass Publishers, 2004.

McGrew, W.C., Ensminger, A., Marchant, L.F., Pruetz, J., and Vigilant, L. Genotyping aids field study of unhabituated chimpanzees. American Journal of Primatology63: 87-93, 2004.

McGrew, W.C., Baldwin, P.J., Marchant, L.F., Pruetz, J.D., Scott, S.E., and Tutin, C.E.G. Ethno-archaeology of the elementary technology of unhabituated wild chimpanzees at Mt. Assirik, Senegal, West Africa. PaleoAnthropology 1: 1-20, 2003.

Hohmann, G., Boesch, C., and Marchant, L.F. Preface. In: Behavioural Diversity in Chimpanzees and Bonobos, C. Boesch, G. Hohmann, and L.F. Marchant, eds. Cambridge University Press, pp. ix-x, 2002.

Marchant, L.F. Introduction: Hunting and Food Sharing. In: Behavioural Diversity in Chimpanzees and Bonobos, C. Boesch, G. Hohmann, and L.F. Marchant, eds. Cambridge University Press, pp.219-220, 2002.

Pruetz, J.D., Marchant, L.F., Arno, J. and McGrew, W.C. Survey of savannah chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in southeastern Senegal. American Journal of Primatology58: 35-43, 2002.

McGrew, W.C.,Marchant, L.F., Scott, S., and Tutin, C.E.G. Intergroup differences in a social custom

of wild chimpanzees: The grooming hand-clasp of the Mahale Mountains, Tanzania. Current Anthropology42: 148-153, 2001.

VideoSupplements:http:/

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Cultural ethology of non-human primates? In: Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt: Zu Person und Werk, Sütterlin, C. and Salter, F.K. eds. Vienna: Peter Lang, pp. 239-244. (Publication date 2001, published 2002).

McGrew, W.C., andMarchant, L.F. Ethological studies of manual laterality in the chimpanzees of the

Mahale Mountains, Tanzania. Behaviour138: 329-358, 2001.

L.F. Marchant--1

Marchant, L.F., Ensminger, A., Pruetz, J., and McGrew, W.C. Highly successful non-invasive

collection of DNA from wild chimpanzees. Pan Africa News 7: 20-21, 2000.

Nakamura, M., McGrew, W.C., Marchant, L.F., and Nishida, T. Social scratch: Another custom in

wild chimpanzees? Primates 41: 237-48, 2000.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Innovative behavior at Mahale: New data on nasal probe and

nipple press. Pan Africa News6: 16-18, 1999.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Laterality of hand use pays off in foraging success for wild

chimpanzees. Primates 40: 509-513, 1999.

McGrew, W.C., Marchant, L.F., Wrangham, R.W., and Klein, H. Manual laterality in anvil use:

Wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) cracking Strychnos fruits. Laterality4: 79-87, 1999.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Human handedness: An ethological perspective. Human Evolution 13: 221-228, 1998. (Published 1999)

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Chimpanzee wears a knotted skin Anecklace@. Pan Africa News 5: 8-9, 1998.

Rigamonti, M.M., Prato Previdè, M.D., Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C., Methodology of

motor skill and laterality: New test of hand preference in Macaca nemestrina. Cortex 34: 693-705, 1998.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. On the other hand: Current issues in and meta-analysis of the

behavioral laterality of hand function in nonhuman primates. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, 40: 201-232, 1997.

Hamill, J.F., and Marchant, L.F. Teaching and computers in the anthropology classroom. In:

Integrating Productivity Tools in College and University Teaching, J.L. Morrison, ed. Microsoft Corporation (CD format), 1997.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Using the tools at hand: Manual laterality and elementary

technology in Cebus spp. and Pan spp. International Journal of Primatology 18: 787-810, 1997.

Marchant, L.F. The great apes revisited. Current Anthropology37: 142-147, 1996.

Marchant, L.F. On the other hand: Gender, space, and power compared. Revue Internationale de

Sociologie6: 357-369, 1996.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. On which side of the apes? Ethological study of laterality of

hand use. In: Great Ape Societies, W.C. McGrew, L.F. Marchant, and T. Nishida, eds. Cambridge University Press, pp. 255-272, 1996.

McGrew, W.C., Marchant, L.F., and Nishida, T. Preface. In: Great Ape Societies, W.C.

McGrew, L.F. Marchant, and T. Nishida, eds. Cambridge University Press, pp. xii-xiv, 1996.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Laterality of limb function in wild chimpanzees of Gombe

National Park: Comprehensive study of spontaneous activities. Journal of Human Evolution 30: 427-443, 1996.

Marchant, L.F., McGrew, W.C., and Eibl-Eibesfeldt, I. Is human handedness universal?

Ethological analyses from three traditional cultures. Ethology101: 239-258, 1995.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. An ethological perspective on human handedness. In: The

Ethological Roots of Culture, R.A. Gardner, A.B. Chiarelli, B.T. Gardner and F.X. Plooij, eds. Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 375-384, 1994.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Primate ethology: A perspective on human and nonhuman

handedness. In: Handbook of Psychological Anthropology, P.K. Bock ed., Greenwood Press, pp. 171-184, 1994.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Are gorillas right-handed or not? Human Evolution 8: 17-23,

1993.

Hamill, J.F., and Marchant, L.F. Interactive courseware in anthropology classrooms, In:

Electronic Technologies and Instruction: Tools, Users, and Power in Anthropology, F. Dubinskas and J. McDonald, eds. National Association for the Practice of Anthropology (NAPA) pp. 12-22, 1993.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Chimpanzees, tools and termites: Hand preference or

handedness? Current Anthropology33: 114-119, 1992.

Hamill, J.F., and Marchant, L.F. Practical computing: Software for teaching anthropology.

Practicing Anthropology14: 33-35, 1992.

Marchant, L.F. Primate reproductive behavior and models of human origins, In: The Archaeology

of Gender, D. Walde and N. Willows, eds. Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary, pp. 50-55, 1991.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Laterality of function in apes: A meta-analysis of methods.

Journal of Human Evolution 20: 425-438, 1991.

Marchant, L.F., and Steklis, H.D. Hand preference in a captive island group of chimpanzees (Pan

troglodytes). American Journal of Primatology 10: 301-313, 1986.

Marchant, L.F. Hand preference among captive island groups of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).

University Microfilms International pp.106, 1983. (Dissertation).

In Press

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. “Percussive technology: chimpanzee baobab smashing and the evolutionary modelling of hominid knapping.” In: Knapping Stone: A Uniquely Hominid Behaviour?, Roux, V., and Bril, B. Eds., Cambridge: McDonald Institute Monograph Series, University of Cambridge.

McGrew, W.C. and Marchant, L.F. Comment on “The invention of technology: prehistory and cognition,” by S. de Beaune. Current Anthropology.

Sarringhaus, L.A., Stock, J.T., Marchant, L.F., & McGrew, W.C. Bilateral asymmetry in the upper arm bones of the chimpanzee, Pantroglodytes. American J. of Physical Anthropology.

Sarringhaus, L.A., McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Are anecdotes irresistible? Lessons from citation analysis in primatology. American Journal of Primatology.

Reviews, Abstracts, Comments, Etc.

Marchant, L.F., McGrew, W.C., Smart, S., & Whiten, A. The Chimpanzee Cultures Website: An online tool for research and teaching. American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Supplement 36), p. 146, 2003.

Marchant, L.F. & McGrew, W.C. Percussive technology: Wild chimpanzees pound open baobab fruits. American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Supplement 34), pp. 106-107, 2002.

McGrew, W.C., Baldwin, P.J., Marchant, L.F., Pruetz, J.D., Scott, S.E., and Tutin, C.E.G.

Ethno-archaeology of unhabituated chimpanzees at Mont Assirik, Senegal, West Africa. American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Supplement 34), pp. 110-111, 2002.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Wild chimpanzees are manually unlateralized: Replicative data from the Mahale Mountains, Tanzania. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 114 (Supplement 32): 102, 2001.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F., Nakamura, M. and Nishida, T. Local customs in wild chimpanzees: The grooming hand-clasp in the Mahale Mountains, Tanzania. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 114 (Supplement 32): 107, 2001.

Pruetz, J., McGrew, W.C., Marchant, L.F., and Arno, J. Status of the savanna chimpanzees (Pan

troglodytes verus) at Mont Assirik in Parc National du Niokolo Koba and in adjacent areas in southeastern Sénégal. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 114 (Supplement 32): 121, 2001.

Reece, S., Marzke, M.W., Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Food object manipulation by

chimpanzees in Mahale Mountains National Park. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 111 (Supplement 30): 259-260, 2000.

Marchant, L.F., McGrew, W.C., and Nakamura, M. Social scratch, a newly reported custom in social

grooming by the chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) of Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 108 (Supplement 28): 190, 1999.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. More than the elite meet to eat: Meat distribution at hunts by

wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 103 (Supplement 26): 154, 1998.

McGrew, W.C., Marchant, L.F., Wrangham, R.W., and Klein, H. Manual laterality in anvil use:

Wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) cracking Strychnos fruit. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 103 (Supplement 26): 159-160, 1998.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Laterality of hand function and efficiency of termite fishing in

Gombe chimpanzees. American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Supplement 24): 166, 1997.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Footedness in chimpanzees? Leading leg in spontaneous

locomotion at Gombe National Park, Tanzania. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 99 (Supplement 22): 157, 1996.

L.F. Marchant--1

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Choosing sides: Levels of laterality in hand use by great apes.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology 96 (Supplement 20): 143, 1995.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. On the other hand: Laterality and elementary technology in

chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 96 (Supplement 20): 149, 1995.

Marchant, L.F. Comment on "The expensive-tissue hypothesis: The brain and the digestive system

in primate evolution" by L.C. Aiello and P. Wheeler. Current Anthropology36: 214, 1995.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Do chimpanzees show handedness or not? American Journal

of Physical Anthropology 93 (Supplement 18): 136, 1994.

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Is human handedness universal? American Journal of Physical

Anthropology 93 (Supplement 18): 144, 1994.

Marchant, L.F. Been Thinkin' It's About Forgiveness. Peacemaking Among Primates by Frans de

Waal. American Journal of Primatology26: 143-146, 1992. (Book Review)

Marchant, L.F., and McGrew, W.C. Hand preference in Pan: A meta-analysis. American Journal

of Primatology 24: 118, 1991.

Marchant, L.F., and Dolhinow, P. Age, motor activity, and cage utilization in a colony of Indian

langurs (Presbytis entellus). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 84 (Supplement 12): 125, 1991.

McGrew, W.C., and Marchant, L.F. Laterality of function in apes: A critical review. American

Journal of Physical Anthropology 84 (Supplement 12): 129-130, 1991.

Marchant, L.F. and McGrew, W.C. Comment on "Intergroup aggression in chimpanzees and

humans" by J.H. Manson and R.W. Wrangham. Current Anthropology 32: 380-381, 1991.

Marchant, L.F. Evolution and Human Equality, in Teaching Sociology18: 596-597, 1990. (Film

Review)

Marchant, L.F. Placentophagia in a captive chimpanzee. American Journal of Primatology 20: 210,

1990.

Marchant, L.F., and Dolhinow, P. Infant development in Presbytis entellus and its relation to natal

coloration. American Journal of Physical Anthropology81: 263, 1990.

Marchant, L.F., and Zihlman, A.L. The lady vanishes. New Scientist 125: 70, 1990. (Letter To

Editor)

L.F. Marchant--1

Marchant, L.F., and Dolhinow, P. Life history and developmental perspectives: A colobine model.

American Journal of Primatology 12: 358, 1987.

Marchant, L.F. Infant coloration in the colobinae. American Journal of Primatology 12: 358-359,

1987.

Steklis, H.D., and Marchant, L.F. Primate handedness: Reaching and grasping for straws? The

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10: 284-286, 1987.

Marchant, L.F., and Cusano, M. Thirteen years of reproductive history on captive island groups of

chimpanzees. American Journal of Primatology 6: 413, 1984.

Harvey, N.C., and Marchant, L.F. Presenting and copulatory behavior during pregnancy in colony

living stumptail macaques. International Journal of Primatology 3: 292, 1982.

Marchant, L.F., and Fritz, P. Social and sensory development in a visually handicapped infant

chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes). American Journal of Primatology 1: 364, 1981.

Videography (Copyrighted)

Marchant, L.F. “Studying wild chimpanzees in Senegal” (14 min.) Premiered at Primate Society of Portugal, Lisbon, Portugal, 17 October, 2003.

Marchant, L.F. “Chimpanzee carnivory: Why share meat?” (13 mins.). Premiered at 22nd Annual Anthropology Symposium – Production and Reproduction, the Evolution of Primate and Human Life Histories, California State University - Fullerton, Fullerton, CA. 27 April, 2002.

Marchant, L.F. AChimpanzee grooming as social custom: Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania@