
I was introduced to Bila a few years ago while working on my article Behind Enemy Lines for Wildlife Conservation. At the time he was just preparing his expedition to the Lac Tumba region of Western Congo. His team's findings were subsequently published in the Cambridge University journal, Oryx (subscription required).
Watch the Nightline report below:
For additional bonobo related posts see Bonobo (Re)Visions, Bonobos "Red in Tooth and Claw" and my interview with bonobo researcher Frances White.
Interesting claim he makes at the end of the segment. I don't know much about fossils, but isn't it possible that skeletons don't preserve as nicely in some climates than others? Perhaps the evidence for human origins outside of E. Africa hasn't been found because it doesn't exist, but NOT because it never existed. What do you think?
ReplyDeleteYes, I've been thinking about that claim for the better part of two days. I'd wondered about that before but the scientific consensus has long been that East Africa is where the Pan-Homo split occurred. I've considered this question at greater length in another post.
ReplyDeleteSee Bonobos in the Garden of Eden.