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    The Biblical stories took place in the Ancient Americas!
    Below are links to an interview with the author to give you an good idea of what’s discussed in this book.
    https://youtu.be/cVla-jp7pA4?t=331
    https://youtu.be/U0EZOerOxfI?t=30

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    Zoofilia-sexo-extremo-mujeres-con-gorilas Access

    Elena’s veterinary training clicked with the behavioral data. Rio wasn’t sick in the traditional sense. He was socially injured.

    In the lush, rain-soaked lowlands of Costa Rica’s Osa Peninsula, a young veterinary scientist named Dr. Elena Mendez was facing a puzzle. Her patient was a male howler monkey named Rio, the alpha of a troop that researchers had studied for a decade. Rio had stopped eating. His booming dawn calls—once audible from three kilometers away—had faded to a raspy whisper. Standard blood tests showed nothing: no parasites, no viral antibodies, no organ failure. Zoofilia-sexo-extremo-mujeres-con-gorilas

    Elena published her case as a landmark paper in the Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine , titled: “When the wound is not the illness: Social pain as a diagnostic target in wild primates.” In the lush, rain-soaked lowlands of Costa Rica’s

    This was the frontier where animal behavior and veterinary science entwine—a place where a cure is not just a molecule, but a story. Rio had stopped eating

    The injury was physical. But the behavior —the self-isolation, the loss of rank, the refusal to eat near others—was social and psychological. In monkey society, a male who cannot compete for prime food loses status. Low status elevates stress, which suppresses healing. A vicious loop.

    Why would an alpha male abandon his favorite food? Fear? Pain? Then, at dusk, she saw it. A juvenile male, Rio’s own offspring, approached a fruit-laden branch. Rio flinched—visibly recoiled—and scrambled higher. The juvenile took the fruit unchallenged.