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The chimpanzees of Gombe:

patterns of behavior
Front Cover
4 Reviews
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1986 - Nature - 673 pages
A comprehensive, up-to-date account of the renowned scientist's quarter-century field study of chimpanzees details their distinct personalities, their complex society, and the surprising behavioral findings of the last few years

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Review: The Chimpanzees Of Gombe: Patterns Of Behavior

User Review  - AC - Goodreads

This is a really huge book -- 600 pages with small print and large format... and I will have to read it very slowly... I am reading it to my *____*, to help them fall asleep... This is not one of her ... Read full review

Review: The Chimpanzees Of Gombe: Patterns Of Behavior

User Review  - Bones - Goodreads

An excellent compilation of data in regard to the chimps at Gombe Reserve National Park, which Goodall devoted most of her life to studying. It covers all behaviours, quantifying them, and has decent pictures. I would really like to see an updated version of this work, as it is very monumental. Read full review

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Contents

Introduction l
1
Dawn of Understanding
7
The Mind of the Chimpanzee
15
Copyright

53 other sections not shown

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About the author (1986)

Jane Goodall, 1934 - Jane Goodall, a well-respected English zoologist, is famous for her fieldwork with chimpanzees in Africa. An early interest in African wild animals and the opportunity, at age 18, to stay on a friend's farm in Kenya, led her to Dr. Louis Leakey; then curator of the National Museum of Natural History in Nairobi. Almost immediately Leakey hired Goodall as his assistant secretary, and she was soon accompanying Leakey and his wife on their expeditions. Following Leakey's suggestion that a field study of some of the higher primates would be a major contribution to the understanding of animal behavior, she began studying the chimpanzees of the Gombe Stream Research Center in Tanganyika (now Tanzania) in 1960. Although she had no undergraduate degree, Goodall earned a Ph.D. from Cambridge University in 1965, based on her first five years of research at the Gombe Center. After more than 20 years of extensive study and direct contact with wild chimpanzees in their natural habitat, Goodall continues to research, teach, and write about primate behavior today.

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