Biological Anthropology at the
University of Southern California

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USC's anthropology department is best known for its nationally prominent program in visual anthropology. There is, however, also a Ph.D. program in biological anthropology with a special emphasis in primatology. Because the two primary faculty members of the program, Craig Stanford and Christopher Boehm, are most interested in the social behavior and ecology of the African great apes - the chimpanzee, bonobo, and gorilla - this is the area in which all of the current graduate students in the program are working. This tight focus has allowed us to conduct some very interesting research into the behavior of great apes and their implications for the origins of behavior in early hominids. Our current crop of graduate student thesis projects range from a field study of the influence of testosterone on the social behavior of wild male chimpanzees (Martin Muller, in Kibale National Park, Uganda) to an action plan for the conservation of African apes (Norm Rosen, also in Uganda) to the nesting behavior of chimpanzees in dry forest habitats and their implications for hominid ranging (Adriana Hernandez, in Tanzania). We have also been quite successful in placing undergraduates in some of the top bioanthro PhD programs in the U.S.

Coursework for the program is a mixture of biological anthropology classes and seminars, taught mainly by Professor Stanford, and required graduate courses taken with the sociocultural faculty.

Graduate students receive support from fellowships and Teaching Assistantships. We have recently established a field research station in Bwindi-Impenetrable National Park, where Professor Stanford is directing a study of chimpanzees and mountain gorillas. This will be a resource for USC students at some point in the future.

Those interested in application materials for graduate study in Biological Anthropology at USC should contact:

Department of Anthropology
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0032 USA
Tel: +1 (213) 740-1900

The Anthropology Department Course Offerings can be found in the

USC Catalogue and in the current Schedule of Classes
It is also highly recommended that you contact one or both faculty members below:


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Biological Anthropology Faculty
(followed by a list of their relevant publications):

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Craig Stanford, Professor and Chair(Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley):


e-mail: stanford@usc.edu

Major Research Projects:

(Total of about 5 years spent in the field, in 16 field seasons of 2-16 months)

1996-present. Directing a field study of sympatric ecology of chimpanzees and mountain gorillas in Bwindi-Impenetrable National Park, Uganda.

1990-95 Field study of predator-prey ecology of chimpanzees and red colobus monkeys, Gombe National Park, Tanzania.

1986-88 Field study of ecology and social behavior in the capped langur (Presbytis pileata)in Bangladesh, with supplemental study of other nonhuman primates, 18 months.

1987 Comparative analysis of Hanuman langur (Presbytis entellus) habitats, north India, 3 months.

1985 Field study of saddle-backed tamarins (Saguinus fuscicollis) in Tambopata Reserve, southern Peru, 2 months.

Some relevant publications, of a total of about 60 including 3 books:



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Christopher Boehm, Professor (Ph.D. Harvard University):


e-mail: cboehm1@concentric.net

Major Research Projects

Laboratory analysis of wild chimpanzee vocal communication, at Jane Goodall Research Center, USC, 1994-1997.

Direction of field investigation of free-ranging chimpanzee social behavior at Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania, using Hi-8 videotape research technology, 1992-1994.

Data analysis: videotaped materials on conflict-resolution behavior of free-ranging chimpanzees, 1989-1990.

Summer field research developing recording techniques for study of long-distance vocal communication of free-ranging chimpanzees, Gombe Stream Research Centre, Tanzania, 6 weeks, 1989.

Field study of developmental aspects of conflict-resolution behavior among free-ranging chimpanzees. Data collection at Gombe Stream Research Centre, Tanzania. Data analysis spring semester 1988 and spring semester 1989. Two years, 1987-1989.

Summer field research on long-distance vocal communication behavior of free-ranging chimpanzees, Gombe Stream Research Centre, Tanzania, 2 months 1987.

Data analysis: long-distance vocal communication behavior of free-ranging chimpanzees, spring semester 1987.

Summer field research on long-distance vocal communication behavior of free-ranging chimpanzees, Gombe Stream Research Centre, Tanzania, 2 months 1986.

Field research on chimpanzee conflict resolution behavior, Gombe Stream Research Centre, Tanzania, fall semester 1985.

Library research and writing on natural history of morality, academic year 1984- 1985.

Summer field work and documentary research on triadic interactions among free-ranging chimpanzees at Gombe Stream Research Centre, Tanzania, 3 months 1984.

Sociolinguistic field research on negotiation behavior, urban USA, 1 month 1983.

Research on egalitarianism in its social, political and biological aspects, at Harvard University, 7 months 1981-1982.

Research on conflict resolution among nonhuman primates, Tozzer Library, 2 months 1982.

Research on the early evolution of morality, Tozzer Library, 2 months 1981.: Conflict resolution in humans and in nonhuman primates; hunter-gatherers and egalitarian societies, chimpanzee social behavior. Fieldwork in Yugoslavia and Tanzania.

Some relevant publications: