SAME 2021: Video Training for Research Impact, Academic Engagement and Science Communication
ALEJANDRA PASCUAL-GARRIDO
- Research Affiliate – School of Anthropology & Museum Ethnography
- University of Oxford
- Video 4 Impact – SAME – 2021
Alejandra Pascual-Garrido was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology from May 2020 until May 2021. In September 2021, she joined the Anthropology Department of Durham University as a Lecturer in Evolutionary Anthropology. In 2022, she was awarded a Leakey Foundation Research Grant for her project on the archaeological signatures of chimpanzee plant-based tools. As a field-based primatologist, she studies the evolution, maintenance, and population-specific variation of plant-based material cultures among wild chimpanzees. While also observing chimpanzees directly, she uses archaeological methods to reconstruct past behaviour from localities where tools where previously employed – via signs on source plants, abandoned implements or tool use sites. Such ‘archaeology of the perishable’ may allow us to make important inferences about early humans. Currently, our perception of the evolutionary trajectories of human material culture is heavily skewed towards lithic technology – because stones are more durable, but also, because we know little about archaeological signatures that plant-based artefacts may leave in the environment.