Search results
Pages
- Title
- Adult and baby primate interacting in a zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D112-39
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92230
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Alternate view of a primate eating in a zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D111-32
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92223
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Alternate view of primate in a zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D111-33
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92224
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Human hand reaching to touch a primate hand in a zoo
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D101-15
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92179
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate and human hand touching at a zoo
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D101-16
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92180
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate and human hand touching in a zoo
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D101-13
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92176
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate arm touching zoo barrier
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D101-12
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92175
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate eating in a zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D108-11
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92210
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate hanging on zoo enclosure bars
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D100-7
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92172
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate reaching towards zoo enclosure bars
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D101-14
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92178
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate sitting in a tree in a zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D108-12
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92211
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Primate swinging in zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D100-8
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92173
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Small primate foraging on the ground of a zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D111-35
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92226
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- Small primate sitting on tree branch in zoo enclosure
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Zoos; Primates
- Local Identifier
- D111-34
- Type
- Negatives (photographic)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-92225
- Rights statement
- Reproduction and copyright information regarding this image is available from the American University Library -- Special Collections.
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A man cuts rows of sugar cane a few miles from Basseterre, St. Kitts on June 21, 2002. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0010_web.tif
- Rights statement
- Copyright 2002 Robert Nickelsberg
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A man cuts rows of sugar cane a few miles from Basseterre, St. Kitts on June 21, 2002. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0011_web.tif
- Rights statement
- Copyright 2002 Robert Nickelsberg
- Title
- St. Kitts and Nevis, Tourists and Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A woman holds up a baby vervet monkey she and her family adopted after the monkey's mother was killed by a dog at Turtle Beach, St. Kitts, ten miles outside Basseterre, the capital city, June 21, 2002. The family and monkey have received rabie shots. A troop of vervet monkeys show up daily at Turtle Beach for food and passion fruit juice served to them at the local bar. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. The British and French fought over the island ever since the British settled in 1623. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys. Locals estimate the monkey population is nearly double the island's human population of 40,000. The monkeys were first brought over by the British as pets and soon escaped. Monkey trappers scour the island attempting to trap the green vervet monkeys. No hunting is permitted around Turtle Beach and monkeys are protected. A troop of monkeys comes daily to the Turtle Beach bar to drink passion fruit juice. Many monkeys are sold to a Yale University supported laboratory situated in a restored sugar mill. The St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation uses the monkeys in stem cell research, Parkinson's disease research, alcoholism, epilepsy, gene therapy and neurodegenerative disorders. A green vervet monkey can sell for up to $500 USD to overseas laboratories. Yale's St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation pays trappers $50-$150 depending on specific requirements for research. Local farmers bitterly complain the vervet monkeys ruin their crops and devour mangoes, cashews, and sweet potatoes.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates; Beaches
- Country
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_nc_0006_web.jpg
- Rights statement
- Copyright 2003 Robert Nickelsberg
- Title
- St. Kitts and Nevis, Tourists and Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A waitress at the Turtle Beach bar watches as a vervet monkey drinks passion fruit juice, ten miles outside Basseterre, the capital city, June 21, 2002. A troop of vervet monkeys show up daily at Turtle Beach for food and passion fruit juice and has become a tourist attraction. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. The British and French fought over the island ever since the British settled in 1623. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys. Locals estimate the monkey population is nearly double the island's human population of 40,000. The monkeys were first brought over by the British as pets and soon escaped. Monkey trappers scour the island attempting to trap the green vervet monkeys. No hunting is permitted around Turtle Beach and monkeys are protected. A troop of monkeys comes daily to the Turtle Beach bar to drink passion fruit juice. Many monkeys are sold to a Yale University supported laboratory situated in a restored sugar mill. The St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation uses the monkeys in stem cell research, Parkinson's disease research, alcoholism, epilepsy, gene therapy and neurodegenerative disorders. A green vervet monkey can sell for up to $500 USD to overseas laboratories. Yale's St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation pays trappers $50-$150 depending on specific requirements for research. Local farmers bitterly complain the vervet monkeys ruin their crops and devour mangoes, cashews, and sweet potatoes.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates; Beaches
- Country
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_nc_0007_web.jpg
- Rights statement
- Copyright 2003 Robert Nickelsberg
- Title
- St. Kitts and Nevis, Tourists and Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A waitress at the Turtle Beach bar watches as a vervet monkey drinks passion fruit juice, ten miles outside Basseterre, the capital city, June 21, 2002. A troop of vervet monkeys shows up daily at Turtle Beach for food and passion fruit juice and has become a tourist attraction. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. The British and French fought over the island ever since the British settled in 1623. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys. Locals estimate the monkey population is nearly double the island's human population of 40,000. The monkeys were first brought over by the British as pets and soon escaped. Monkey trappers scour the island attempting to trap the green vervet monkeys. No hunting is permitted around Turtle Beach and monkeys are protected. A troop of monkeys comes daily to the Turtle Beach bar to drink passion fruit juice. Many monkeys are sold to a Yale University supported laboratory situated in a restored sugar mill. The St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation uses the monkeys in stem cell research, Parkinson's disease research, alcoholism, epilepsy, gene therapy and neurodegenerative disorders. A green vervet monkey can sell for up to $500 USD to overseas laboratories. Yale's St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation pays trappers $50-$150 depending on specific requirements for research. Local farmers bitterly complain the vervet monkeys ruin their crops and devour mangoes, cashews, and sweet potatoes.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates; Beaches
- Country
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_nc_0008_web.jpg
- Rights statement
- Copyright 2003 Robert Nickelsberg
- Title
- St. Kitts and Nevis, Tourists and Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-20
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Foreign tourists watch as women in bikinis walk down a dock during a bathing suit contest at Turtle Beach, St. Kitts, ten miles outside Basseterre, the capital city, June 20, 2002. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. The British and French fought over the island ever since the British settled in 1623. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys. Locals estimate the monkey population is nearly double the island's human population of 40,000. The monkeys were first brought over by the British as pets and soon escaped. Monkey trappers scour the island attempting to trap the green vervet monkeys. No hunting is permitted around Turtle Beach and monkeys are protected. A troop of monkeys comes daily to the Turtle Beach bar to drink passion fruit juice. Many monkeys are sold to a Yale University supported laboratory situated in a restored sugar mill. The St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation uses the monkeys in stem cell research, Parkinson's disease research, alcoholism, epilepsy, gene therapy and neurodegenerative disorders. A green vervet monkey can sell for up to $500 USD to overseas laboratories. Yale's St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation pays trappers $50-$150 depending on specific requirements for research. Local farmers bitterly complain the vervet monkeys ruin their crops and devour mangoes, cashews, and sweet potatoes.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates; Beaches; Bikinis
- Country
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_nc_0003_web.jpg
- Rights statement
- Copyright 2003 Robert Nickelsberg