CURRICULUM VITAE

Transcrição

CURRICULUM VITAE
CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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CURRICULUM VITAE Susana Cláudia Ribeiro Marques de Carvalho Nationality: Portuguese Languages: Portuguese, English, French, Italian, and Spanish Main Fields of Research: Human Evolution; Primatology; Archaeology E-­‐mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Website: http://oxford.academia.edu/SusanaCarvalho ACADEMIC RECORD 2012 -­‐ present: Post-­‐doctoral Researcher, Primate Archaeology Group, University of Oxford, U.K. 2012 -­‐ present: Junior Research Fellow (Non-­‐Stipendiary), Clare Hall College, Cambridge, U.K. 2011 -­‐ 2012: Junior Research Fellow (Stipendiary), Clare Hall College, Cambridge, U.K. 2011 -­‐ 2012: Gibbs Travelling Fellow, Newnham College, Cambridge, U.K. 2008-­‐ present: Visiting Lecturer, University of Coimbra, Portugal 2007 -­‐ 2012: Ph.D. in Biological Anthropology University of Cambridge Dissertation: Evolutionary Origins of Technological Behaviour: A Primate Archaeology Approach to Chimpanzees Advisor: Prof. William C. McGrew (Cambridge) 2007: M.Sc. in Human Evolution University of Coimbra, Portugal Dissertation: Applying the Concept of Chaîne Opératoire to Nut-­‐cracking – An Approach Based on Studying Communities of Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in Bossou and Diecké (Republic of Guinea) Advisors: Prof. Eugénia Cunha (University of Coimbra), Dr. Cláudia Sousa (New University of Lisbon), Prof. Tetsuro Matsuzawa (Kyoto University). 2004: Primatology Field Course: Ecology and Behaviour of Neotropical Primates Universidad de Vera Cruz, Instituto de Neuroetología, Montepio, México 1997: B.A. (Hon.) in Archaeology Oporto University, Portugal 1996: Erasmus Program in Archaeology Catânia University, Italy PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE (1998 -­‐ 2007) 2003-­‐2007: Archaeologist, City Council of Leiria, Portugal (Civil servant) Main responsibilities: Founding of the first archaeological offices in City Councils of Montemor-­‐o-­‐
Novo and Leiria; archaeological surveys and mapping of those areas; coordination of museological projects; direction of many archaeological excavations; coordination of exhibitions; editing of exhibition publications, devising educational workshops for children, etc. 1999-­‐2003: Archaeologist, City Council of Montemor-­‐o-­‐Novo, Portugal (Civil servant) 1998-­‐1999: Archaeologist, City Council of Batalha, Portugal (Civil servant) CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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PUBLICATIONS (i) Published 1. Haslam M., Gumert M., Biro D., Carvalho S., Malaivijitnond S. (2013). Use-­‐Wear Patterns on Wild Macaque Stone Tools Reveal Their Behavioural History. PLoS ONE 8(8): e72872. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0072872 2. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W.C. (2013). From pounding to knapping: How living apes can help us model hominin lithics. In: C. Sanz, J. Call, C. Boesch (Eds.). Tool Use in Animals: Cognition and Ecology. Cambridge University Press. Pp. 225-­‐241. 3. Assis S., Carvalho S. (2012) Evolutionism and the teaching of science: How Portugal has been “Playing with the big tree of evolution”. Evolution: Education and Outreach 5 (3): 445 – 452. 4. Carvalho S., Biro D., Cunha. E., Hockings K., McGrew W.C., Richmond B., Matsuzawa T. (2012). Chimpanzee carrying behavior and the origins of human bipedality. Current Biology 22: R180-­‐
181. 5. Carvalho S., McGrew W.C. (2012) The origins of the Oldowan: Why chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) still are good models for technological evolution in Africa. In: Domínguez-­‐
Rodrigo, M. (Ed.) Stone Tools and Fossil Bones: Debates in the Archaeology of Human Origins. Cambridge University Press. Pp.222-­‐244. 6. Hockings K., Humle T., Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. (2012) Chimpanzee interactions with other species in an anthropogenic habitat. Behaviour 149: 299-­‐324. 7. Carvalho S. (2011) Extensive surveys of chimpanzee stone tools: From the telescope to the magnifying glass. In: Matsuzawa T., Humle T., Sugiyama Y. (Eds.) The Chimpanzees of Bossou and Nimba: A Cultural Primatology. Springer, Tokyo. Pp. 145-­‐156. 8. Carvalho S. (2011) Diecké Forest, Guinea: Delving into chimpanzee behavior using stone tool surveys. In: Matsuzawa T., Humle T., Sugiyama Y. (Eds.) The Chimpanzees of Bossou and Nimba: A Cultural Primatology. Springer, Tokyo. pp. 301-­‐312. 9. Biro D., Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. (2010) Tools, traditions and technologies: Interdisciplinary approaches to chimpanzee nut-­‐cracking. In: Lonsdorf E.V., Ross S.R., Matsuzawa T. (Eds.) The Mind of the Chimpanzee: Ecological and Experimental Perspectives. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Pp.141-­‐155. 10. Carvalho S., Biro D., McGrew W.C., Matsuzawa T. (2009) Tool-­‐composite reuse in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes): Archaeologically invisible steps in the technological evolution of early hominins? Animal Cognition 12: 103-­‐114. 11. Haslam M., Hernandez-­‐Aguílar A., Ling V., Carvalho S., de la Torre I., De Stefano A., Du A., Hardy B., Harris J.W.K., Marchant L., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W., Mercader J., Mora R., Petraglia M., Roche H., Stout D., Visalberghi E., Warren R. (2009) Primate archaeology. Nature 460: 339-­‐444. 12. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., Sousa C., Cunha E. (2009) Hammers, anvils & nuts: Chimpanzee technology? Applying the concept of chaîne opératoire to nut-­‐cracking. In: Cunha E. and Group of Studies in Human Evolution (Eds.) Humans, evolution and environment, British Archaeological Reports (B.A.R) International Series, S2026, 22: 137-­‐142. 13. Ling V., Hernandez-­‐Aguilar A., Haslam M., Carvalho S. (2009) The origins of percussive technology: A smashing time in Cambridge. Evolutionary Anthropology 18: 48-­‐49. 14. Carvalho S., Cunha E., Sousa C., Matsuzawa T. (2008) Chaînes opératoires and resource exploitation strategies in chimpanzee nut-­‐cracking (Pan troglodytes). Journal of Human Evolution 55: 148-­‐163. (ii) In preparation 1. Carvalho S., McGrew W.C, Piel A., Stewart F., Pascual-­‐Garrido A., Haslam M. Untapped Technology? Percussive Potential for the Chimpanzees of Issa, Tanzania. 2. Carvalho S., Gowlett J.A.J., Braun D., Harris J.K.W., Matsuzawa T. A comparative approach to material remains on modern chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), Oldowan and Acheulean sites. CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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3. Hockings K., Carvalho S., Fujisawa M., Humle T., McGrew W.C., Nakamura M., Ohashi G., Yamanashi Y., Matsuzawa T. Wild chimpanzees consume alcohol using tools. 4. Biro D., Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. Vertical transmission of tool-­‐composite choice in wild chimpanzees: insights into social influences on stone tool selectivity? 5. Mendonça R., Adachi I., Carvalho S., Dahl C., Sousa C., Matsuzawa T. Chimpanzees are prosocial in a task mediated by a touch-­‐panel computer. (iii) Other scholarly publications 1. Carvalho S. (2011) Book review: Beautiful Minds, the Parallel Lives of Great Apes and Dolphins, by Stanford C., and Bearzi M. Antropologia Portuguesa, 26: 443-­‐459. 2. Carvalho S., Yamanashi Y., Yamakoshi G., Matsuzawa T. (2010) Bird in the hand: Bossou chimpanzees capture West African wood-­‐owls (Ciccaba woodfordi) but not to eat. Pan African News 17 (1): 6-­‐9. 3. Carvalho S., Carvalho A., Angelucci D.E., Tavares J. (2009) [Industrial Archaeology -­‐ The Paper Mill]. Câmara Municipal de Leiria. Portugal. pp. 32-­‐49. [in Portuguese] 4. Carvalho S., Sousa C., Matsuzawa T. (2007) New nut-­‐cracking sites in Diecké forest, Guinea: An overview of the etho-­‐archaeological surveys. Pan African News 14 (1): 11-­‐13. 5. Carvalho S., Tavares J. (2005) [The flint source and Martinela knapping site], In Carvalho S. (ed.) [Inhabitants and Habitats – Pre and Proto history in the Lis River Basin]. Câmara Municipal de Leiria. Portugal. pp. 26-­‐33. 6. Zambujo G., Carvalho S. (2005) [Quinta do Bispo – Parceiros: The first Mesolithic site in the Lis River basin], In Carvalho S. (ed.) [Inhabitants and Habitats – Pre and Proto history in the Lis River Basin]. Câmara Municipal de Leiria. Portugal. pp. 84-­‐103. 7. Carvalho S. (2003) [Preventive test pits in the Castle of the Outeiro or Carrilhas], Arqueologia Medieval 8: 83-­‐97. 8. Carvalho S. (2003) [Emergency excavation in the Old Cloister of the Monastery of S. João de Deus – Montemor-­‐o-­‐Novo], Almansor 2: 111-­‐144. 9. Carvalho S. (2002) [The Castle of Outeiro or Carrilhas (Lavre)], Almansor 1: 7-­‐32. TEACHING (i) Lecturing 2013 – Present: Visiting Assistant Professor ICArEHB (Interdisciplinary Centre for Archaeology and Evolution of Human Behavior), University of Algarve, Portugal 2008 -­‐ Present: Visiting Lecturer 1) Primate Social Cognition; Cultural Primatology; Primate Archaeology 2) Evolution of Human Behaviour PhD program in Anthropology & M.Sc. in Human Evolution and Biology, University of Coimbra, Portugal 2008 -­‐ Present: Instructor & Researcher-­‐Collaborator Koobi Fora Field School, Lake Turkana, Kenya (Rutgers University and Kenya National Museums). Lecturer: 1) Emergence of the First Technologies; 2) Using Chimpanzees as Models for Human Evolution; 3) Practical on Experiments on Percussive Activities”; co-­‐supervising archaeological surveys and monitoring students during archaeological excavations. 2008: Supervisor (Tutor) 1) Cultural Primatology Dept. of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of Cambridge CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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(ii) Graduate Student Advising (Committee Member) 2012 -­‐ Present: Ms. Renata Mendonça (Ph.D in Primatology) Mother-­‐infant relations in wild orang-­‐utans (Pongo pygmaeus morio) in Sabah, Borneo 2012 -­‐ Present: Ms. Joana Bessa (M.Sc. in Human Evolution and Biology) The ecology and technology of the Guinea-­‐Bissau chimpanzees 2012 -­‐ 2013: Ms. Maria Ana Correia (M.Sc. In Human Evolution and Biology) The evolution of spatial cognition in the Homo lineage [concluded] 2011 -­‐ 2013: Mr. Richard Marques (M.Sc. in Human Evolution and Biology) The emergence of the first technologies and the role of social learning in mastering simple tool use [concluded] 2011 -­‐ 2013: Ms. Joana Prieto (M.Sc. in Human Evolution and Biology) Hunting and vertebrate consumption in wild capuchin monkeys (Cebus libidinosus) from Fazenda Boa Vista, Brazil: an evolutionary approach [concluded] 2010 -­‐ 2012: Ms. Renata Mendonça (M.Sc. in Human Evolution) Captive chimpanzee´s behavior competing for food resources that require numerical touch panel skills [concluded] 2009 -­‐ 2011: Mrs. Vânia Carvalho (M.Sc. in Human Evolution) The Lapedo Child Fossil, LV1, and the archaeological contexts of the Upper Paleolithic in Central Portugal [concluded] PROJECTS & FELLOWSHIPS & AWARDS 2012 -­‐ 2016: PDRA in European Research Council Starting Grant “Primate Archaeology: Providing an evolutionary context for human technology” (with W.C. McGrew, T. Nakamura M., C. Sanz, D. Morgan, E. Visalberghi, E. Ottoni, M. Gumert, S. Malaivijitnond, T. Matsuzawa., P.I. is M. Haslam) Oxford €1,450,000 2011 -­‐ 2012: Junior Research Fellowship (Stipendiary), Clare Hall College, Cambridge 2011 -­‐ 2014: Leverhulme Network Grant “Percussive activities in human evolution”, (with H. Roche, S. Harmand, T. Matsuzawa, W.C. McGrew, R. Mora, R. Blumenschine, J.K. Njau.; P.I. is I. de la Torre) University College London £124,991 2011 -­‐ 2012: Phyllis and Eileen Gibbs Travelling Fellowship, Newnham College, Cambridge £7,000 2010: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (HOPE-­‐Genes to Mind), Japan for young researchers (3-­‐month research fellowship) €9,000 2008: The Wenner-­‐Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, U.S.A., Fieldwork Dissertation Grant $23,900 2008 -­‐ 2012: Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), Portugal, Ph.D. Studentship 2008 -­‐ 2010: Honorary Cambridge European Trust bursary (awarded but not taken up) 2007 -­‐ 2008: Cambridge European Trust (with Isaac Newton Trust) bursary £9,000 2006 -­‐ 2007: Grant Statute, City Hall of Leiria, Portugal €6,900 Other Awards & smaller Grants: 2010: Best work in Museography (Team award), by the Portuguese Museology Association (APOM) to “Paper Mill”, Portugal 2010: Afonso Lopes Vieira Award for achievement in scientific research, Portugal CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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2010: 2010: 2009: 2009: 2008: 2008: 2008: 2008: 2008: 2007: 2003 -­‐ 2005: 1996: Best Oral Presentation, “Primate Mind and Society” conference, Japan Centre of Research in Anthropology and Health (CIAS), Portugal, congress bursary [€500] Centre of Research in Anthropology and Health (CIAS), Portugal, congress bursary [€200] European Federation of Primatology, congress bursary [€140] Best Poster Presentation, International Conference, Lusófona University, Lisbon, Portugal Leakey Trust UK, for fieldwork support [£400] Queens’ College, Cambridge, for fieldwork support [£300] FCT, Portugal, congress bursary, [€323] CIAS, Portugal, research aid [€450] Best Poster Presentation, Iberian Primatological Congress, Portugal [€100] Best Portuguese Exhibition (Team award), by the Portuguese Museology Association (APOM) to “Inhabitants and Habitats” -­‐ Human Evolution Exhibition, Portugal Erasmus Scholarship [€2,500] MOST RELEVANT FIELDWORK OUTSIDE EUROPE 2012: July-­‐August, Tanzania, Ugalla: Wild chimpanzee research (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) 2012: May-­‐July, Kenya, East Lake Turkana, Koobi Fora: Palaeoanthropological and archaeological research Jan-­‐Feb, Guinea, Bossou: Wild chimpanzee research (Pan troglodytes verus) June-­‐July, Kenya, East Lake Turkana, Koobi Fora: Palaeoanthropological field school March, Malaysia, Borneo, Danum Valley: wild orang-­‐utan research (Pongo pygmaeus morio) June-­‐July, Koobi Fora: Palaeoanthropological and archaeological research Jan-­‐June & Sep-­‐Nov, Bossou and Diecké: Wild chimpanzee research July, Koobi Fora: Palaeoanthropological and archaeological research Apr-­‐May & Nov-­‐Dec, Bossou and Diecké: Wild chimpanzee research July, Koobi Fora: Palaeoanthropological and archaeological research Jan-­‐May & Nov-­‐Dec, Bossou and Diecké: Wild chimpanzee research Mar-­‐Apr, México, Vera Cruz, Catemaco & Montepío: Wild howler monkey (Alouatta palliata) and spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) research 2012: 2011: 2011: 2010: 2009: 2009: 2008: 2008: 2006: 2004: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE & WORKSHOP ORGANISATION 2013: 2011: 2010: 2010: I BioAnthropological Meeting (I BAM), Coimbra, Portugal (scientific committee) From Primate Archaeology to Human Evolution, day-­‐long symposium at 4th Archaeological Meeting for Early Career Researchers, Portugal (organizer) Tools in Primates, Post-­‐congress workshop at International Primatology Society, Sasagamine Huette, Japan (organizer with M. Hayashi and M. Hirosawa) HOPE-­‐From Genes to Mind: Lectures on Primate Mind and Society, Kyoto, Japan (organizer with M. Hayashi, K. Hockings, T. Matsuzawa and M. Tomonaga) CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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2008: Origins of Percussive Technology, Paleoanthropology Meets Primatology 2, Cambridge, U.K. (organizer with M. Haslam, A. Hernandez-­‐Aguilar and V. Ling) 2005 -­‐ 2006: International Cycle of Conferences in Human Evolution, Leiria, Portugal (organizer with E. Cunha) COORDINATION OF SCIENTIFIC EXHIBITS & MUSEOLOGY PROJECTS 2003-­‐2009: [The Paper Mill] O Moinho do Papel (Leiria, Portugal) 2004-­‐2006: [Inhabitants and Habitats – Pre and Proto history in the Lis River Basin] Habitantes e Habitats, Pré e Proto-­‐história na Bacia do Lis (Leiria, Portugal) 2001-­‐2003: [One object, one monthly story] Um objecto, uma história, mês a mês (Montemor-­‐ o-­‐ Novo, Portugal). PRESENTATIONS (i) Invited Seminars, lectures & symposia 1. Carvalho S. (2013). Primate Archaeology, an Interdisciplinary Ethology: Why does it matter? Key-­‐speaker, 10th National Congress of Ethology, Lisbon, Portugal 2. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., Arroyo A., Benito A., and de la Torre I. (2013). Chimpanzee technical behaviour and tool modification at Bossou, Percussive technology in Human Evolution, Leverhulme International Networks Workshop, Kyoto, Japan 3. Carvalho S. (2013). Studying wild chimpanzees to model the origins of primate technology, Eileen and Gibbs Annual Meeting, Newnham College, Cambridge, U.K. 4. Marques R., Carvalho S., Cunha E., Matsuzawa T. (2013) The first technologies and the role of social learning in mastering simple tool use: A chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) approach to human evolution, I Bioanthropological Meeting (I BAM), Coimbra University, Portugal 5. Prieto J., Carvalho S., Mendonça-­‐Furtado O., Spagnoletti N., Verderane M., Wasterlain S., Visalberghi E. (2013). Vertebrate consumption by wild bearded capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus) from Fazenda Boa Vista (Piauí, Brazil), I Bioanthropological Meeting (I BAM), Coimbra University, Portugal 6. Carvalho S., Braun D., Harris J.K.W, McGrew W.C., Matsuzawa T. (2012). Wild chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) and pleistocene hominin raw material preference compared: evidence from archaeological data and natural experiments, PaleoAnthropology Society Meetings, Memphis, USA 7. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. (2012). Wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) match early hominin preferences in raw material selection for stone tool use, Royal Society Meeting: Tool use as an adaption, Kavli Center, UK 8. Haslam M., Crowther A., Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. (2012). Use-­‐wear and residue analysis of chimpanzee pounding tools: a contribution to primate archaeology, An integration of use-­‐
wear and residues analysis for the identification of the function of archaeological stone tools, international workshop, “Sapienza” University of Rome, Italy 9. Carvalho S. (2012). Evolutionary origins of technological behavior: A primate archaeology approach to chimpanzees, Paleobiology and Turkana Basin Institute Seminar Series, Stony Brook University, USA 10.Carvalho S. (2012). Evolutionary origins of technological behavior: A chimpanzee archaeology approach, Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology Seminar, George Washington University, USA 11.Carvalho S. (2011). Nuts about cracking: Primate Archaeology, technology & evolution, Lecture, Rutgers University, USA CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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12. Carvalho S., Biro D., McGrew W.C., Matsuzawa T. (2011). Sex differences during transport of resources by wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and the origins of storage behavior, 4th Congress of the European Federation of Primatology, symposium on Primate Archaeology, Almada, Portugal 13. Braun D., Carvalho S., Harris J.W.K., Plummer T. (2011). Transport behavior among Oldowan hominins and modern chimpanzees: inferences of behavior, 4th Congress of the European Federation of Primatology, symposium on Primate Archaeology, Almada, Portugal 14. Biro D., Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. (2011). Vertical transmission of tool-­‐composite choice in wild chimpanzees: insights into social influences on stone tool selectivity? 4th Congress of the European Federation of Primatology, symposium on Primate Archaeology, Almada, Portugal 15. Harris J.W.K., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W.C., Visalberghi E., Marchant L., Carvalho S., Braun D., Du A., Dibble L., Lyons C. (2011). Establishing a Pre-­‐Oldowan pounding tool industry: theoretical models, experimental insights and preliminary fieldwork in Africa, 4th Congress of the European Federation of Primatology, symposium on Primate Archaeology, Almada, Portugal 16. Carvalho S. (2011). Primate archaeology: something new, something old, something borrowed and lots to do. JIA 2011, From Primate Archaeology to Human Evolution, Algarve University, Portugal 17. Carvalho S. (2011). The origins of the Oldowan: Why are chimpanzees still good models for the technological evolution in Africa? Seminar, University of Liverpool, UK 18. Carvalho S. (2011). The origins of the Oldowan: Why are chimpanzees still good models for the technological evolution in Africa? Seminar, University of Kent, UK 19. Carvalho S. (2010). The origins of the Oldowan: Why are chimpanzees still good models for the technological evolution in Africa? 7th Annual African Archaeology Research Day, University of Cambridge, UK 20. Carvalho S. (2010). [The origins of the Oldowan: Why chimpanzees are still good models for technological evolution in Africa], Conference at National Museum of Archaeology, Lisbon, Portugal (in Portuguese) 21. Carvalho S. (2010). The origins of the Oldowan: Why are chimpanzees still good models for the technological evolution in Africa? Lecture, University College London, UK 22. Carvalho S., Biro D., Matsuzawa, T., Richmond B. (2010). A window onto hominin evolution? Clues to the origins of technological evolution and bipedalism from chimpanzee field experiments, International Primatological Society Congress, Symposium on Primate Archaeology, Kyoto, Japan 23. Haslam M., Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T. (2010). Residue analysis of modern and ancient chimpanzee pounding tools from Bossou and Diecké, Guinea: Defining a primate archaeological signature, IPS Symposium on Primate Archaeology, Kyoto, Japan 24. Carvalho S., Visalberghi E. (2010). Experimental approaches to the study of nut-­‐ cracking in wild chimpanzees and capuchin monkeys, Workshop on Innovations in Field Methods, Kyoto, Japan 25. Carvalho S. (2010). The origins of the Oldowan: Why are chimpanzees still good models for the technological evolution in Africa? Seminar, Primate Research Institute, Japan. 26. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W. (2010). Weaving different trends of research in Guinea: From field experiments to environmental education. The intersection of comparative cognitive science and field science, Nagoya, Japan 27. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T, McGrew W. (2010). From pounding to knapping: How chimpanzee archaeology can help us model lithic technology. Primate Mind and Society – HOPE, From Genes to Mind, Kyoto, Japan 28. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W. (2009). From pounding to knapping: How living apes can help us model hominin lithics. Workshop on Understanding Tool Use, Max-­‐Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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29. J.W.K. Harris, D.R. Braun, J. McCoy, M. Rogers, M. Kibunjia, B. Pobiner, M. Bennett, B. Richmond, Bamford, E. Mbua, P. Kiura, E. Ndiema, W. McGrew, E. Visalberghi, L. Marchant, S. Carvalho, S. Merritt, S. Morse, L. Dibble, A. Du, K. Barbour, C. Lyons, A. Van Plantinga, and J. Rodgers (2009). Retrospective on the archaeology of human origins, East of Lake Turkana, Kenya: New Discoveries and New Directions. International Symposium Africa, Cradle of Humanity: Recent Discoveries, Algeria 30. Carvalho S. (2008). [From the archaeology in municipalities to chimpanzee archaeology: is it possible to bring together public service and scientific research in Portugal?]. Conference, Leiria Castle, Portugal (in Portuguese) 31. Carvalho S., Biro D., McGrew W. C., Matsuzawa T. (2008). To have and to hold: Individual preferences for tool-­‐composites in wild chimpanzees. Origins of Percussive Technology, Palaeoanthropology Meets Primatology 2, University of Cambridge, UK 32. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W.C. (2008). Nut-­‐cracking & Nut-­‐cracker: Etho-­‐
archaeology in Pan sites at Bossou and Diecké, Guinea. XXII Congress of the International Primatological Society, Edinburgh, Scotland 33. Carvalho S. (2008). [Chimpanzee Archaeology: Origins and evolution of percussive technology]. Research Seminars in Anthropology, University of Coimbra, Portugal (in Portuguese) 34. Carvalho S. (2008). Chimpanzee archaeology and the evolutionary origins of technology. PRI/WRC Lecture Series, On Human Nature, Kyoto, Japan 35. Carvalho S. & GEEvH -­‐ Group of Studies in Human Evolution (2008). Playing with the big tree of human evolution: Interdisciplinary project. Seminar LCHES@LCHES. Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, University of Cambridge, UK 36. Carvalho S. (2008). Chimpanzee archaeology: Chaînes opératoires, resource-­‐exploitation, and the evolution of technology. Seminar LCHES@LCHES. Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, University of Cambridge, UK 37. Carvalho S. (2007). Chaînes opératoires and resource-­‐exploitation strategies in chimpanzee nut-­‐cracking (Pan troglodytes). Bossou-­‐Nimba Annual Meeting. Primate Research Institute, University of Kyoto, Japan 38. Carvalho S. (2007). Applying the concept of Chaîne opératoire to nut-­‐cracking – An approach based on studying communities of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in Bossou and Diecké (Republic of Guinea). Lecture, University of Évora, Portugal 39. Carvalho S. (2007). Nutcrackers and chimpanzees: Bridging archaeology and primatology – Interdisciplinary research. Faculty of Social and Human Sciences, New University of Lisbon, Portugal. 40. Carvalho S., Sousa C., Matsuzawa T. (2007). The nut-­‐cracker: bridging archaeology and primatology – Chimpanzee stone tool use in Bossou and Diecké, Guinea, 2nd Congress of European Federation of Primatology, Charles University, Prague 41. Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., Sousa C., Cunha E. (2006). Hammers, anvils & nuts: Chimpanzee technology? XV International Union for Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences Congress, Lisbon, Portugal 42. Carvalho S. (2006). Marteaux, enclumes et noix: Technologie de chimpanzés? Application du concept de chaîne opératoire au nut-­‐cracking – Une investigation interdisciplinaire. Bossou 30 years congress: The symbol of collaboration between Guinea and Japan, Conakry, Guinea (ii) Poster presentations 1. Prieto J., Carvalho S., Mendonça-­‐Furtado O., Spagnoletti N., Verderane M., Wasterlain S., Visalberghi E. (2013). Vertebrate consumption by wild bearded capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus) from Fazenda Boa Vista (Piauí, Brazil). II Congresso Latino Americano – XV Congresso Brasileiro de Primatologia, Recife, Brazil 2. Mendonça R., Adachi I., Carvalho S., Dahl C., Sousa C., Matsuzawa T. (2013). Chimpanzees are CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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prosocial in a task mediated by a touch-­‐panel computer. I Bioanthropological Meeting (I BAM), Coimbra University, Portugal Mendonça R., Carvalho S., Sousa C., Matsuzawa T. (2011). Mother-­‐infant relations in wild orang-­‐utans (Pongo pygmaeus morio) in Sabah, Borneo. 4th Congress of the European Federation of Primatology, Almada, Portugal Carvalho S., Yamakoshi G., McGrew WC., Matsuzawa T. (2009). Bird-­‐of-­‐Prey turns prey: do chimpanzees hunt for sport? The 3rd Congress of the European Federation of Primatology, Zurich, Switzerland Carvalho S., Biro D., McGrew W.C., Matsuzawa T. (2008). To have and to hold: individual preferences for tool-­‐composites in wild chimpanzees. Behaviour and Individuality in Primates and Other Mammals, International Conference, Lusófona University, Portugal Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., McGrew W.C. (2007). Chimpanzee archaeology: seeking the evolutionary origins of technology. 1st Iberian Meeting of Primatology, Peniche, Portugal Assis S., Carvalho S. & Group of Studies in Human Evolution/GEEvH. (2006). Interdisciplinary anthropology: human evolution studies. 3rd Congress of the Portuguese Association of Anthropology, Lisbon, Portugal Carvalho S., Matsuzawa T., Sousa C. (2005). Applying archaeological concepts to primatology: a methodological challenge. 2nd Portuguese International Primatological Conference, Lisbon, Portugal MANUSCRIPT REVIEWING
Journal of Human Evolution; PaleoAnthropology Journal; Current Anthropology; PLoS ONE; Biological Journal of the Linnean Society MEDIA COVERAGE § “Aping the stone Age”: Science News http://www.britannica.com/bps/additionalcontent/18/45367567/Aping-­‐the-­‐Stone-­‐Age; § “Chimpanzee carrying behaviour”: BBC Radio 4; BBC Radio Scotland; Independent (UK); Dailymail (UK); ABC News (USA); etc EDUCATIONAL OUTREACH: § Group of Studies of Human Evolution, Portugal (Vice-­‐president): https://www.facebook.com/pages/GEEvH-­‐Group-­‐of-­‐Studies-­‐in-­‐Human-­‐
Evolution/91182905588 http://geevh.jimdo.com/ USEFUL LINKS § http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/percussive_technology_network § http://www.newn.cam.ac.uk/joining-­‐newnham/travelling-­‐fellowships § http://www.clarehall.cam.ac.uk/index.php?id=62 § http://greencorridor.info/index.html § http://www.wennergren.org/grantees/carvalho-­‐susana-­‐c-­‐ribeiro-­‐marques-­‐de CV Susana Carvalho, November 2013,
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PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP International Primatological Society (IPS); Paleoanthropology Society; Society of American Archaeology (SAA); Group of Studies in Human Evolution (GEEvH); Portuguese Association of Primatology (APP); Professional Association of Archaeologists (APA); National Museums of Kenya (NMK: Research Associate)