In gorilla's midst: Hanke studied primates: Sophomore traveled to Uganda to study mountain gorillas with prof
Amidst the dense vegetation and high elevation of Bwindi Impenetrable National Park in southwestern Uganda, Alexa Hanke '99 and Anthropology Professor Michele Goldsmith spent this past winter studying the behavioral patterns of mountain gorillas. Last fall, Goldsmith approached students in her Primate Biology and Behavior class about traveling with her to Uganda to aid her research on the comparative ecology of chimpanzees and gorillas. Hanke was selected from a group of six applicants. A few months later, the pair was living in camping conditions, half the time without bathrooms or running water, and hiking several miles a day. Accompanied by trackers over the mountainous terrain, the two followed a group of 13 gorillas that had never previously been researched. Braving the elements Hanke and Goldsmith were forced to contend with a variety of dangers, including charging gorillas, infestations of ants, a run-in with an elephant, and bacterial infections from unsafe drinking water. On a typical day, Hanke and Goldsmith would wake up early, build a fire to boil water for drinking and prepare breakfast.
