The woman on the left was not mauled by a chimpanzee.
Her name is Carmen Tarleton, and she was attacked by her estranged husband, who doused her with industrial-strength lye. It burnt her all over, and she needed more than 50 surgeries and two face transplants after the attack to be human again.
And strange as it may be, this woman does resemble typical victims of chimp attacks — the most notable one being Charla Nash, who lost her eyes, nose, lips and much more in an attack by the pet chimp of her best friend which only lasted a couple of minutes, but changed her life forever.
And I’ll bet you have never seen similar wounds on a victim of, say, a rabbit attack or a sheep (and even a horse, for that matter) biting accident. And that’s because of the fact that chimpanzees have an entirely different dental structure than herbivores, and that they are not shy of instinctively (and even strategically) attacking, killing, and eating other animals in the wild.
Insects, crabs, monkeys, birds, tortoises, and even other chimps are all part of the diet of chimpanzees — which might be healthy indeed, but also more bloody than you probably expected.
Gorillas do not actively hunt as far as I know, but they do eat insects, and recently, traces have been discovered of antelopes and monkeys in the feces of African western lowland gorillas

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