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Smithsonian November 2006 Paul Raffaele |
Bonobo Paradise Founded by Claudine Andre, a Belgian woman raised in the Congo, Lola Ya Bonobo is home to 52 bonobos, from infants to adults, most of them orphaned when their mothers were slaughtered for bushmeat. |
Salon.com May 18, 2000 Deirdre Guthrie |
The Erin Brockovich of the bonobo Sex sells, says Dr. Susan Block, so why not use it to save an endangered species? |
Adventure Robert J. Ross |
Congo Photo Gallery: Expedition Bonobo A perilous expedition into the Democratic Republic of the Congo hopes to establish contact that will help preserve the Iyaelima people and rare bonobo apes. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Ken Schweller |
Apes With Apps Using tablets and customized keyboards, bonobos can become great communicators |
Salon.com August 23, 2001 Charles Taylor |
"Beauty and the Beasts" by Carole Jahme Women primatologists braved death threats, rapist orangutans and the twisted mentoring of Louis Leakey to bring us the truth about apes... |
Salon.com July 22, 2002 Susan McCarthy |
Sometimes a snake orgy is just a snake orgy A new book examines what we can and can't learn about sex from watching bonobos, birds and earwigs. |
Outside October 2005 Barcott & Duane |
Primal Urges Books: Our Inner Ape by Frans de Wall... The Ape in the Corner Office by Richard Conniff... A Crack in the Edge of the World: American and the Great California Earthquake by Simon Winchester... Walking it Off: A Veteran's Chronicle of War and Wilderness by Doug Peacock... |
Smithsonian November 2006 Paul Raffaele |
Speaking Bonobo With bonobo and other ape-language experiments, the mythology of human uniqueness is coming under challenge. If apes can learn language, which we once thought unique to humans, then it suggests that ability is not innate in just us. |
Science News July 4, 2008 Tia Ghose |
The Score: How the Quest for Sex Has Shaped the Modern Man "What makes a man?" Faye Flam, a science writer who pens a sex column for The Philadelphia Inquirer, seeks a scientific answer to this often-asked question in her latest book. |
AskMen.com |
How Did Laughter Evolve? While human laughter sounds much different from the ape versions, its distinctive features could well have arisen from shared ancestral traits. |