What Is Dian Fossey Famous for ?
Question by *smartbabii*: what is dian fossey famous for ?
please help !!!
Best answer:
Answer by cybersharque
Trying to preserve Highland Gorillas from being exterminated for bush meat and ashtrays (yes, you can still find ashtrays made from their hands and feet in Harare, at least before the humies started slaughtering each other with such abandon). Murdered for her efforts.
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Dian Fossey was a zoologist who went to Africa (Rawanda) researching a special group of gorrilas. She was murdered whilst living out there. You can read all about her in Wikipedia.
Dian Fossey (January 16, 1932 – December 27, 1985) was an American zoologist who completed an extended study of eight gorilla groups. She observed them daily for years in the mountain forests of Rwanda, initially encouraged to work there by famous paleontologist Louis Leakey.
Her work is somewhat similar to Jane Goodall’s work with chimpanzees
[edit] Education and early school/learning.
Dian enrolled in a pre-veterinary course at the University of California, Davis, after attending Lowell High School in San Francisco, going against the advice of her stepfather who wanted her to pursue business instead. She supported herself by working as a clerk at the White House Department Store, doing other clerking and laboratory work, and working as a machinist in a factory. Dian later transferred to San José State College (now San José State University) to study occupational therapy after having difficulty with chemistry and physics. She received her bachelor’s degree in 1954. At that time, Dian also established herself as an equestrian.
Initially following her college major, Fossey began a career in occupational therapy. She would become director of the occupational therapy department at Kosair Children’s Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky [1]. It was in Louisville she attended a lecture by Louis Leakey.
[edit] Interest in Africa
Fossey became interested in Africa after seeing photos and hearing about it from a friend named, Mary White Henry, who had been there. After taking out a loan in 1963 she embarked on a trip to Africa. At Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, Fossey met Dr. Louis Leakey and his wife Mary Leakey while they were examining the area for hominid fossils. Louis talked to Dian about the work of Jane Goodall and the importance of long term research of the great apes, work pioneered by George Schaller. After leaving the Leakeys Dian saw her first wild mountain gorillas during a visit to Uganda.
By 1966 Fossey had gained the support of Dr. Leakey, and through him, funds to carry out long-term research on the mountain gorillas. She began her field study at Kabara, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (then Zaire), but by 1967, political upheaval forced her to move to Rwanda,[2] which raised $ 30,000 for her to use. In Rwanda she established the Karisoke Research Center.
[edit] Start of her work
In 1967, she founded the Karisoke Research Center, a remote rainforest camp nestled in the Virunga Mountains in Ruhengeri province, Rwanda. When her photograph, taken by Bob Campbell, appeared on the cover of National Geographic Magazine in January 1970, Fossey became an international celebrity, bringing massive publicity to her cause of saving the mountain gorilla from extinction, as well as convincing the general public that gorillas are not as bad as they are sometimes depicted in movies and books. Photographs showing the gorilla “Peanuts” touching Fossey’s hand depicted the first recorded peaceful contact between a human being and a wild gorilla. Her extraordinary rapport with animals and her background as an occupational therapist brushed away the Hollywood “King Kong” myth of an aggressive, savage beast.
Fossey strongly supported “active conservation”—for example anti-poaching patrols and preservation of natural habitat—as opposed to “theoretical conservation”, which includes the promotion of tourism. She was also strongly opposed to zoos, as the capture of individual animals all too often involves the killing of their family members. Many animals do not survive the transport, and the breeding rate and survival rate in zoos are often lower than in the wild. For example, in 1978, Fossey attempted to prevent the export of two young gorillas, Coco and Pucker, from Rwanda to the Cologne, Germany, zoo. She learned that, during their capture, 20 adult gorillas had been killed.[2] The two captives were given to Fossey by their captors for treatment of injuries suffered during capture and captivity. With considerable effort, she restored them to some approximation of health. They were shipped to Cologne, where they lived nine years in captivity, both dying in the same month.[3] She viewed the holding of animals in “prison” (zoos) for the entertainment of people as unethical.[4] Fossey is responsible for the revision of a European Community project that converted parkland into pyrethrum farms. Thanks to her efforts, the park boundary was lowered from the 3000-meter line to the 2500-meter line.
Fossey’s book Gorillas in the Mist was praised by Nikolaas Tinbergen, the Dutch ethologist and ornithologist who won the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Her book remains the best-selling book about gorillas of all time.
[edit] Death
Fossey was brutally murdered in the bedroom of her cabin on December 26, 1985. Her skull had been split by a native panga, a tool widely used by poachers, which she had confiscated years earlier and hung as a decoration on the wall of her living room adjacent to her bedroom. Fossey was found dead beside her bed and 2 meters away from the hole in the cabin that was cut on the day of her murder.[5] Despite the violent nature of the wound, there was relatively little blood in her bedroom, leading some to believe that she was killed before the head-wound was inflicted, as head wounds, even superficial ones, usually bleed profusely.
Farley Mowat’s biography of Fossey, Virunga: The Passion of Dian Fossey, posits that it is unlikely that she was killed by poachers. Mowat believes that she was killed by those who viewed her as an impediment to the touristic and financial exploitation of the gorillas. According to the book, which includes many of Fossey’s own private letters, poachers would have been more likely to kill her in the forest, with little risk to themselves.
On the night of Fossey’s murder, a metal sheathing from her bedroom was removed at the only place of the bedroom where it would not have been obstructed by her furniture, which supports the case that the murder was committed by someone who was familiar with the cabin and her day-to-day activities. The sheathing of her cabin, which was normally securely locked at night, might also have been removed after the murder to make it appear as if the killing was the work of poachers. But according to Mowat it is unlikely that a stranger could have entered her cabin by cutting a hole and then going to her living-room to get the panga, all while Fossey could have had enough time to escape. The cabin was in great disarray, with broken glass on the floor and tables and other furniture turned around. Fossey was found dead with her gun beside her, but the ammunition was of the wrong caliber and didn’t fit the weapon. All of Fossey’s valuables in the cabin, thousands of dollars in cash and travelers’ checks, and photo equipment remained untouched—valuables a poor poacher would most likely have taken.
After Fossey’s death, her entire staff, including Rwelekana, a tracker she had fired months before, was arrested. All but Rwelekana, who was later found dead in prison, supposedly having hanged himself, were released. Mowat believes that Fossey was murdered by an African man she may have admitted inside her cabin but who was working for the very people who wanted her removed so the gorillas could be exploited as a tourist and entertainment attraction.[5]
According to Linda Melvern in her book Conspiracy to Murder, Protais Zigiranyirazo, Rwanda’s ex-president’s brother-in-law, could also have been “implicated in the murder of Dian Fossey in 1985.” Quoting Nick Gordon, author of a book about Fossey’s death, “Another reason why she might have been murdered is that she knew too much about the illegal trafficking by Rwanda’s ruling clique.” Protais Zigiranyirazo, who was the prefect of the Ruhengeri province (where Karisoke was located), also had strong financial interests in gorilla tourism.
Dian Fossey was portrayed by her detractors as eccentric and obsessed, and all kinds of stories were circulated about her. According to her letters, ORTPN, the World Wildlife Fund, African Wildlife Foundation, FPS, the Mountain Gorilla Project and some of her former students tried to wrest control of the Karisoke research center from her for the purpose of tourism, by portraying her as unstable. In her last two years Fossey claims not to have lost any gorillas to poachers; however the Mountain Gorilla Project, which was supposed to patrol the Mount Sabyinyo area, tried to cover up gorilla deaths caused by poaching and diseases transmitted through tourists. Nevertheless these organizations received most of the public donations.[citation needed] The public often believed their money would go to Fossey, who was struggling to finance her anti-poaching patrols, while organizations collecting in her name put it into costly tourism projects and as she put it “to pay the airfare of so called conservationists who will never go on anti-poaching patrols in their life”.
Many of the organizations that opposed Fossey, including ORTPN (the Rwandan tourism office) and other wildlife organizations, used and continue to use her name for their own financial gain up to this day.[citation needed] Weeks before her death, ORTPN refused to renew her visa, and pressure on Fossey was mounting. However, Fossey managed to obtain a special two-year visa through Augustin Nduwayezu, a benevolent Secretary-General in charge of immigration.[5] Mowat believes that the extension of her visa amounted to a de facto death warrant.
Months before her death, Fossey signed a $ 1,000,000 contract with Warner Bros. for a movie that was to be based on her book, Gorillas in the Mist. The prospect that her work would be funded far into the future may have contributed to her demise.
Fossey’s will stated that all her m