Gorilla Adventure - Animals Captured

Animals Captured

Animals captured in Gorilla Adventure
Species Name Details
Male Gorilla Gog His family were slaughtered by Nero and he assumed the safari team to be the killers.
Two baby gorillas Bubu & Nuru Their entire band were killed by Nero and his gang.
Female Gorilla Lady Luck She is easily captured by Roger because she is distracted by wrestling with the white python.
Python Snow White Although this python is white in colour she is not an albino, as evidenced by her blue eyes.
Black Panther Gog trapped Hal in an elephant pit and threw the panther into it. Hal captured the panther empty-handed, though he received serious injuries.
Road Runner
Chimpanzee The Good Samaritan This chimpanzee gained his nickname by helping a colobus in the midst of volcano eruption.
Boomslang Particularly notable for possessing two heads.
Cobra
Mamba
Elephant Shrew
Bush Baby
Colobus The Little Bishop
Willard Price's Adventure series
Novels
  • Amazon Adventure (1949)
  • South Sea Adventure (1952)
  • Underwater Adventure (1954)
  • Volcano Adventure (1956)
  • Whale Adventure (1960)
  • African Adventure (1963)
  • Elephant Adventure (1964)
  • Safari Adventure (1966)
  • Lion Adventure (1967)
  • Gorilla Adventure (1969)
  • Diving Adventure (1970)
  • Cannibal Adventure (1972)
  • Tiger Adventure (1979)
  • Arctic Adventure (1980)
Characters
  • Hal and Roger Hunt
  • Merlin Kaggs
  • List of villains


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Famous quotes containing the words animals and/or captured:

    Humans are amphibians—half spirit and half animal.... As spirits they belong to the eternal world, but as animals they inhabit time.
    —C.S. (Clive Staples)

    Wild Bill was indulging in his favorite pastime of a friendly game of cards in the old No. 10 saloon. For the second time in his career, he was sitting with his back to an open door. Jack McCall walked in, shot him through the back of the head, and rushed from the place, only to be captured shortly afterward. Wild Bill’s dead hand held aces and eights, and from that time on this has been known in the West as “the dead man’s hand.”
    State of South Dakota, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)