PPPG

René Bobe Receives the 2025 Gordon P. Getty Award

Breaking new ground: from Gorongosa to global recognition Dr. René Bobe, paleobiologist and evolutionary anthropologist, has been awarded the 2025 Gordon P. Getty Award for Multidisciplinary Research. The award honors extraordinary originality, dedication, and a multidisciplinary approach to human origins research. Bobe’s work bridges fieldwork and theory, linking climate, ecology, and evolution. His research spans

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Farassi Wins Best Poster Prize at IPS 2025

A milestone for Mozambican primatology We are thrilled to congratulate Rassina Assane Farassi, PhD student at Gorongosa National Park, for receiving the Best Poster Prize at the International Primatological Society Congress 2025 in Antananarivo, Madagascar. Rassina is the first Mozambican primatologist to attend this prestigious congress, marking an important milestone for early-career scientists from Mozambique.

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Philippa Hammond finding baboons via radio collaring

New PPPG study sheds light on how Gorongosa baboons navigate seasonal risks

We’re excited to announce the publication of a new peer-reviewed article from the Paleo-Primate Project Gorongosa (PPPG), led by Philippa Hammond in collaboration with Kaitlyn Gaynor, Tara Easter, Dora Biro, and Susana Carvalho. The study, titled “Landscape-scale effects of season and predation risk on the terrestrial behaviour of chacma baboons,” has been published in the

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Perched high above the floodwaters, a lone baboon surveys a drowned landscape on Gorongosa’s floodplain, weeks after Cyclone Idai tore through central Mozambique. Gaunt and isolated, it clings to the last dry refuge—stripped branches and bitter leaves. Its troop, once visible in the trees nearby, is gone. This one vanished days later. While many animals managed to reach higher ground, not all could. The cyclone's toll was not just in numbers, but in moments like this—quiet, haunting, and easily overlooked.

Gorongosa’s primates after cyclone Idai – a new study & a new Doctor

We’re thrilled to share a new peer-reviewed publication led by Megan Beardmore-Herd, now officially Dr. Beardmore-Herd 🎓, and co-authored by Meredith Palmer, Kaitlyn Gaynor, and Susana Carvalho. The article, just out in the American Journal of Biological Anthropology, examines how primates in Gorongosa National Park responded to one of the most extreme recent weather events

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Exploring Gorongosa’s subsurface: highlights from the November 2024 Geology Fieldwork

From the 2nd to the 10th of November 2024 a geology-focused field season occured in Gorongosa National Park. Led by a diverse team including Melissa Boyd, Leu Balate, João d’Oliveira Coelho, Sidónia Tagir and Clara Mendes, marked another milestone in the Paleo-Primate Project Gorongosa’s exploration of Mozambique’s rich geological, paleontological, and archaeological heritage. This short

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Tracking baboons in Gorongosa: exciting research updates from PPPG

The Paleo-Primate Project Gorongosa (PPPG) team is making remarkable progress in their research on baboon behavior and ecology in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique. With the rainy season approaching, GPS collaring has been implemented to track baboons when on-foot observation becomes challenging. This innovative approach promises to yield invaluable data for several ongoing studies led by

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New publication highlights the Cheringoma Plateau’s speleological heritage

Paleo-Primate Project Gorongosa Exploring the Caves of Inhaminga The PPPG has made significant strides in documenting the unique speleological features of central Mozambique. A new paper, Caves of Inhaminga: the Speleological Heritage of the Cheringoma Plateau, Mozambique, authored by Frederico Tátá Regala, Maria José Pinto, Luís Meira Paulo, and collaborators, sheds light on this fascinating

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PPPG awarded Leakey Foundation grant

Field season 2024:This summer, the Paleo-Primate Project Gorongosa made significant progress in understanding the past ecosystems of the southern rift through their systematic excavations in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique. Supported by a prestigious research grant awarded to Dr. René Bobe by The Leakey Foundation, the project continues to break new ground in exploring the role

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