famous painting
The most recent addition of apparently right-oriented New Caledonian has led some to wonder if, when it comes to sharing a preference for one side, most animals are much more like people than previously thought."The old idea that this is only in humans and not in other animals is clearly not true," said Hopkins. "I think you could argue a handedness is present in many many animals and it's just a matter of finding them." commit itself to one side or another," he said. "But chimps don't seem to show any overall leanings."William Hopkins, a psychologist at Berry College in Mount Berry, Georgia, disagrees. His studies with chimps in captivity show the animals overwhelmingly favor using their right hands.trees' crevices and yanking out spiders, millipedes, larvae and cockroaches. This species of crow, which populates the island of Grand Terre, New Caledonia (a Pacific island east of Australia)
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
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