Mar 30

Watch: Jane Goodall and Her Chimps

Jane Goodall brings Lara Logan and “60 Minutes” cameras back to the forests of Tanzania, where she began her love affair with chimpanzees 50 years ago, to remind the public that chimps are endangered.

 

 

7 Responses to “Watch: Jane Goodall and Her Chimps”

  1. Robert H

    Well I say I thing on one of those news shows where the chimps attacked there owners and bit off there fingers and penis and on the woman her nipples. I don’t think I’d want to piss one of those apes off. Getting my head popped off by a Bigfoot might better then getting the family Jewell’s bit off.

  2. larry h

    if we are like any animal according to the laughable scientist our brain size and capacity matches the Dolphin not a chimps. And because a monkey puts a stick in a hole and get termites or a rock to crack a nut does not make what they used a tool. How they learned these methods was by sheer accident more than likely, and one chimp seen the first chimp who discovered it by accident do it and copied it and so on. They have no proof at all that man and apes share ancestry in any way just because our bodies are similar dose not mean we are related. So I guess if we had a hump on our backs we would some how be related to Camels, using their logical way of thinking and insight. So scientist get over yourselves your reasoning and ideas are not that impressive.

    • Gail d

      I agree with you Larry, they are lovely creatures ,but are wild animals. For all we know they could have seen humans eating with utensils and copied it. Still they should be protected from poachers and are great to watch. That chimp who injured that lady should never have been kept as a pet, they are not meant for that at all.

  3. Eddie M

    When the males reach sexual maturity they become territorial and aggressively protective. The same behavior boogers display. Bear shared a childhood encounter where a young male wanted to play with he and his siblings until his granddad scared it off. They were catching lightning bugs and laughing. If Chimps share 98% DNA with us…Boogers share 99.4%.

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