Caption: Karen Strier, professor of anthropology and zoology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is pictured in her office in Sewell Social Sciences Building on April 19, 2010. Strier and Professor Susan Alberts at Duke University are co-principal investigators of the Primate Life History Database, a collaborative and comprehensive database, launched in 2010, that contains data collected from long-term field studies of seven species of lemurs, monkeys and apes.
Photo by: Jeff Miller
Date: April 2010
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Caption: Karen Strier, professor of anthropology and zoology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is pictured in her office in Sewell Social Sciences Building on April 19, 2010. Strier and Professor Susan Alberts at Duke University are co-principal investigators of the Primate Life History Database, a collaborative and comprehensive database, launched in 2010, that contains data collected from long-term field studies of seven species of lemurs, monkeys and apes.
Photo by: Jeff Miller
Date: April 2010
High-resolution JPEG


Caption: Northern muriqui monkeys from a wild population in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest are pictured in 2008. University of Wisconsin-Madison anthropologist Karen Strier has devoted the past 28 years to studying these critically endangered monkeys, and compiling an unparalleled account of their births, deaths and lives. Strier and Professor Susan Alberts at Duke University are co-principal investigators of the Primate Life History Database, a collaborative and comprehensive database, launched in 2010, that contains data collected from long-term field studies of seven species of lemurs, monkeys and apes.
Photo: courtesy Carla B. Possamai/Universidade Federal de Espirito Santo
Date: 2008
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