Wild Gorillas Impress With Their Tools
fatgav writes "The BBC is running an article about wild gorillas being seen to use tools in the wild. It is especially significant as not only have Gorillas never been seen to use tools, but they have been using them in a way unlike other great apes. From the article: 'The most astonishing thing is that we have observed them using tools not for obtaining food, but for postural support.' The scientists are getting excited as it can help to explain questions as to how the most advanced great ape (us) came to evolve."
Check here for some examples of tool usage in the other great ape families (primarily chimpanzees).
Actually, some folks think baboons are more intelligent than gorillas... Steve Van Nattan is one. Here's a really odd little story...
"Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech."--Benjamin Franklin
Ya know, it's right there in the title bar. You don't have to scroll.
I thought it's been well known for years that gorillas use tools. You don't think they've typing all that spam by hand do you?
I read Usenet for the articles.
The difference here is that no other species has the concept of being advanced. Hell, they don't even have the concept of concept. So, in the terms of reasoning, yes, we are the "most advanced".
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
Well, since he didn't really make any argument beyond saying that the article was wrong, and did so in an incredibly blunt manner, it's a flame at best. At worst, a troll targeting a (largely) atheistic/agnostic audience. If he'd said something more like "Well, you're assuming evolution is more than a theory..." there'd be some validity to your claim. (and, admittedly, you'd probably still be making it, because an offended atheist/agnostic would have modded his post down anyway)
Note that these findings are published in the freely available, creative commons licensed journal PLoS Biology:
http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?requestEntire issues are offered as beautiful PDFs. From the PLoS site http://www.plosjournals.org/: