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Chimps with tool kits.


Chimpanzees living in the wild have been videotaped using "tool kits" consisting of sticks tailored to specific tasks. While other species, like crows and the great apes great ape

one of the larger monkeys, usually the tailless ones; includes gorilla, orang-utan, chimpanzee.
, have been observed using simple tools, chimps are apparently the first (besides humans) found to use different tools for different jobs. Researchers Crickette Sanz of Washington University in St. Louis “Washington University” redirects here. For other uses, see Washington (disambiguation).
Washington University in St. Louis is a private, coeducational, research university located in St. Louis, Missouri.
, Dave Morgan Dave Morgan (born August 7, 1944 in Cranmore, Somerset[1]) is a British former racing driver from England. He participated in one Formula One World Championship grand prix, the 1975 British Grand Prix in which, like several others, he crashed during a storm in the  of Cambridge University Cambridge University, at Cambridge, England, one of the oldest English-language universities in the world. Originating in the early 12th cent. (legend places its origin even earlier than that of Oxford Univ.  in England, and Steve Gulick of Wildland Security videotaped chimps in Africa's Congo Basin as the animals sought out a favorite delicacy--termites. The chimps used three distinct tools: a heavy puncturing stick, a lightweight perforating stick, and a flexible fishing stick. A chimp invading an underground termite termite or white ant, common name for a soft-bodied social insect of the order Isoptera. Termites are easily distinguished from ants by comparison of the base of the abdomen, which is broadly joined to the thorax in termites; in ants, there is  nest would first use the heavy puncturing stick, pushing it into the ground with both hands and one foot, like a gardener digging with a spade. For above-ground nests, the chimps used the lighter stick to poke holes in the dirt. Once a termite mound had been invaded, the chimps gathered around the hole with their fishing sticks, which have one end crushed to make a sort of brush. Then, they dipped the sticks into the hole, pulled out the termites clinging to the brushy end, and slurped them up.
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Title Annotation:Science
Publication:New York Times Upfront
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 24, 2005
Words:199
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