Bronze Age Aegean (ca. 3500–1100 B.C.) wall paintings from the islands of Crete and Thera depict monkeys in a variety of roles such as running wild in nature, possibly following (trained) commands, and participating in sacred activities. These images, while stylistically Aegean, are traditionally considered closely related to—and descendant from—Egyptian, Near Eastern, and Mesopotamian monkey imagery. While monkey depictions in the latter regions may provide species-specific characteristics, Aegean wall paintings typically lack this level of detail. In an attempt to better understand the relationships between the monkeys depicted in Aegean wall paintings and the species that were encountered by the Aegean, Mesopotamian, and Egyptian peoples...
Aim: Our knowledge of the prehistoric distribution of animal species is so far largely dependent on ...
Two genera of nonhuman primates, howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata and A. pigra) and spider monkeys ...
The ability to create and appreciate art is thought to be one of the most striking features of being...
Bronze Age Aegean (ca. 3500–1100 B.C.) wall paintings from the islands of Crete and Thera depict mon...
none2siShahr‐i Sokhta (Iran) was an important urban settlement in the Near East between the end of t...
Strategies for conserving species threatened with extinction are often driven by ecological data. Ho...
Ancient Egyptian art is filled with the images of a wide range of animal species, testimony to the c...
How have our visual brains evolved, and exactly how did this constrain the specific way that animals...
The southern African cercopithecid (monkey) fauna has undergone a profound change in composition and...
In recent years, a thanatology of primates has become a respectable research topic, and although sti...
Since its inception, archaeology has traditionally focused exclusively on humans and our direct ance...
People’s perceptions of primates vary across and within cultures and may not be consistent with thei...
Archaeologists have struggled for more than a century to explain why the first representational art ...
This commentary emerged from a panel presentation at the International Primatological Society Congre...
In this article we briefly review primate interactions with predators throughout their evolutionary ...
Aim: Our knowledge of the prehistoric distribution of animal species is so far largely dependent on ...
Two genera of nonhuman primates, howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata and A. pigra) and spider monkeys ...
The ability to create and appreciate art is thought to be one of the most striking features of being...
Bronze Age Aegean (ca. 3500–1100 B.C.) wall paintings from the islands of Crete and Thera depict mon...
none2siShahr‐i Sokhta (Iran) was an important urban settlement in the Near East between the end of t...
Strategies for conserving species threatened with extinction are often driven by ecological data. Ho...
Ancient Egyptian art is filled with the images of a wide range of animal species, testimony to the c...
How have our visual brains evolved, and exactly how did this constrain the specific way that animals...
The southern African cercopithecid (monkey) fauna has undergone a profound change in composition and...
In recent years, a thanatology of primates has become a respectable research topic, and although sti...
Since its inception, archaeology has traditionally focused exclusively on humans and our direct ance...
People’s perceptions of primates vary across and within cultures and may not be consistent with thei...
Archaeologists have struggled for more than a century to explain why the first representational art ...
This commentary emerged from a panel presentation at the International Primatological Society Congre...
In this article we briefly review primate interactions with predators throughout their evolutionary ...
Aim: Our knowledge of the prehistoric distribution of animal species is so far largely dependent on ...
Two genera of nonhuman primates, howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata and A. pigra) and spider monkeys ...
The ability to create and appreciate art is thought to be one of the most striking features of being...