Too small for his HGH engorged trunk.
Jamie look up how big those plastic containers are
He didnât see the camera pointing directly at the front door to his own apartment? Cmon man, thatâs how Aaron Hernandez got caught. Gotta murder better next time.
pain is in the box.
With the amount of dumb some murders do to get caught, it really makes you wonder how much pure uncut murder is happening by smart people that nobody will ever figure out.
So maybe Rogan wasnât totally insane about the chimps that sleep on the ground and donât fear people, just off a little about them being 6â tall and walking upright.
This seems to be a strange choice, as sleeping on the ground may make them more vulnerable to leopards and other predators, which abound in the savanna-woodland mosaic of Bili. Referring to an observation made by project worker Ligada Faustin of a chimpanzee munching on a leopard carcass, Cleve Hicks explained that âthese chimpanzees may have turned the tables on leopards. This may explain why in this population, the apes appear to be unafraid of nesting on the ground. For the moment, though, these intriguing observations raise more questions than they provide answers.â Currently, Hicks is working with University of Warsaw PhD candidate Toni Romani to further investigate ground nesting in the Bili-UĂ©rĂ© chimpanzees, and in other populations of these great apes across a much larger area.
Getting there means a gruelling 40km (25-mile) trek through the jungle, from the nearest road, not to mention navigating croc-infested rivers. But when he arrived he found apes without their normal fear of humans. Chimps near the road flee immediately at the sight of people because they know the consequences of a hunterâs rifle, but these animals were happy to approach him. âThe further away from the road the more fearless the chimps got,â he added.
Mr Hicks reports that he found a unique chimp culture. For example, unlike their cousins in other parts of Africa the chimps regularly bed down for the night in nests on the ground. Around a fifth of the nests he found were there rather than in the trees.
âHow can they get away with sleeping on the ground when there are lions, leopards, golden cats around as well as other dangerous animals like elephants and buffalo?â said Mr Hicks.
âI donât like to paint them as being more aggressive, but maybe they prey on some of these predators and the predators kind of leave them alone.â He is keen to point out though that they donât howl at the moon.
âThe ground nests were very big and there was obviously something very unusual going on there. They are not unknown elsewhere but very unusual,â said Colin Groves, an expert on primate morphology at the Australian National University in Canberra who has observed the nests in the field.
Prof Groves believes that the Bili apes should prompt a radical rethink of the family tree of chimp sub-species. He has proposed that primatologists should now recognise five different sub-divisions instead of the current four.
Mr Hicks said the animals also have what he calls a âsmashing cultureâ - a blunt but effective way of solving problems. He has found hundreds of snails and hard-shelled fruits smashed for food, seen chimps carrying termite mounds to rocks to break them open and also found a turtle that was almost certainly smashed apart by chimps.
Like chimp populations in other parts of Africa, the Bili chimps use sticks to fish for ants, but here the tools are up to 2.5 metres long.
Absolute moron is accidentally partly right one time. News at 11.
And therefore subject matter experts are wrong all the time!