Pauléoula

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Pauléoula
Poléoula
Village
GMT
)

Pauléoula (also spelled Poléoula) is a village in the far west of

Cavally River, which is the border with Liberia
.

Pauléoula was a commune until March 2012, when it became one of 1126 communes nationwide that were abolished.[1]

The original population of Pauléoula consisted mostly of members of the Oubi ethnic group, a small subgroup of the Krahn or Guéré people.
A few kilometers east of Pauléoula, within the boundaries of the Taï National Park, lies a small research centre, the 'Institut d'Écologie Tropicale'.[2] It was a lonely house in the forest, not far from this institute, where the Swiss scientist Christophe Boesch in the 1980s conducted his famous research on the behaviour of tool-using Chimpanzees. Later, between 2008 and 2012, the movie Chimpanzee was filmed here, under difficult conditions, and with Boesch as principal scientific consultant.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ "Le gouvernement ivoirien supprime 1126 communes, et maintient 197 pour renforcer sa politique de décentralisation en cours", news.abidjan.net, 7 March 2012.
  2. ^ At this location: 5,832917, -7,342557
  3. ^ See also: Chimpanzee at the International Movie database

External links