Kathy Schick

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Kathy Diane Schick is an American archaeologist and paleoanthropologist. She is professor emeritus in the Cognitive Science Program at Indiana University and is a founder and co-director of the Stone Age Institute. Schick is most well known for her experimental work in taphonomy as well as her experimental work, with Nicholas Toth, on the stone tool technology of Early Stone Age hominins, including their work with the bonobo (“pygmy chimpanzee”) Kanzi who they taught to make and use simple stone tools similar to those made by our Early Stone Age ancestors. Provided by Wikipedia
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    Making silent stones speak : human evolution and dawn of the tecnology / by Schick, Kathy Diane, Toth, Nicholas Patrick

    Published 1993
    Book