Russell Howard Tuttle
Russell Howard Tuttle
Contributor
BIOGRAPHY

Russell H. Tuttle is an active Professor of Anthropology, Evolutionary Biology, History of Science and Medicine and the College at the University of Chicago. He conducted pioneering functional morphological work on apes via electromyography (EMG) and meticulous dissections, leading to the conclusion (recently supported by fossils) that chimpanzees poorly represent the locomotive pattern that underpinned the evolution of human terrestrial bipedalism. He also provided a functional interpretation of the 3.66 million-year-old hominid footprint trails at Laetoli, Tanzania, which has held up well vis-à-vis challenges of other commentators.

He has received several national and campus teaching awards, including the Charles R. Darwin Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Distinguished Primatologist Award of the Midwest Primate Interest Group, Medallion of the Collège de France, Medal of the Fondation Singer-Polignac, 50-year Membership and Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science.

He has conducted field and laboratory studies in Tanzania, Kenya, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Japan, and Perú, and in numerous museums in Europe, Asia and North America.

Primary Contributions (4)
Margaret Mead conducting fieldwork in Bali
Anthropology, “the science of humanity,” which studies human beings in aspects ranging from the biology and evolutionary history of Homo sapiens to the features of society and culture that decisively distinguish humans from other animal species. Because of the diverse subject matter it encompasses,…
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Publications (3)
The Functional and Evolutionary Biology of Primates
The Functional and Evolutionary Biology of Primates (August 2007)
By Russell Tuttle
These original contributions on the evolution of primates and the techniques for studying the subject cover an enormous range of material and incorporate the work of specialists from many different fields, showing the necessity of a multidisciplinary approach to problems of primate morphology and phylogeny. Collectively, they demonstrate the concerns and methods of leading contemporary workers in this and related fields. Each contributor shows his way of attacking fundamental problems of evolutionary...
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Apes of the World: Their Social Behavior, Communication, Mentality and Ecology
Apes of the World: Their Social Behavior, Communication, Mentality and Ecology (June 1986)
By Russell H. Tuttle
The first major and most comprehensive synthesis of results from ecological, naturalistic behavioral, comparative psychological, and humanoid language research on apes since the classic work, The Great Apes, by Robert M. and Ada Yerkes in 1929. Based on more than 1,360 references from scientific journals, monographs, symposium volumes, and other public sources, the book contains a wealth of current information on the taxonomy, ecology, postural and locomotive behavior, natural communications,...
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Socioecology and Psychology of Primates (World Anthropology Ser)
Socioecology and Psychology of Primates (World Anthropology Ser) (1975)
Pp. xv, 474; 7 black-and-white photo-plates, some line-drawings and graphs. Publisher's original black cloth lettered in white on the spine, color pictorial dust jacket, lg 8vo. This volume provides a wealth of new information about the ways in which natural habitats and social contexts may influence behavior. Topics covered are meat-eating and hunting in baboons, chimpanzees and large carnivores, psychological capacities and tool behavior in primates, and the language skills of chimpanzees (from...
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