Social Sciences Division
Research Professor
Professor Emerita
Faculty
355 Social Sciences 1
Social Sciences 1 Faculty Services
B.A., University of Colorado
Ph.D.,University of California, Berkeley
Academic Interests: Physical anthropology, primate and human evolution, comparative functional anatomy, sex and gender, life history and evolutionary theory, and history of human evolutionary studies.
Current research: Skeletal biology of wild chimpanzees; growth and development of apes and hominids; locomotor anatomy of langur monkeys; evolution of hominid bipedality.
Professor Zihlman’s research focuses around questions of the course of primate evolution, human origins and evolution, in the wider context of adaptation and evolutionary processes. To address these questions she carries out research on comparative anatomy of monkeys, apes and humans. Her goal is to document and explain variation due to age and sex and correlate anatomy with behavior, so as to provide a basis for understanding and reconstructing primate and human evolution.
Her current laboratory projects include vervet monkey, gorilla and chimpanzee growth, and comparative morphology of orangutans, gorillas, and chimpanzees.
Africa (Kenya, Uganda, South Africa) and Europe.
Comparative functional anatomy and locomotion of apes and humans; skeletal biology of apes; growth and development in catarrhine primates; sex differences in anatomy and behavior.
Physical anthropology, primate and human evolution, comparative functional anatomy, sex and gender, life history and evolutionary theory, and history of human evolutionary studies.