I’m pretty sure that’s a dictator
The old world monkey that became s<span>pecial interest to paleoanthropologists because it lives in savannahs like those in which we expect ancestral humans may have lived is: </span><span>baboons
the </span>paleoanthropologists paid a lot of interest to this animal because their behavior and decision-making process is very close to human.
For example, in their baboons' group, there will be some type of leaders that lead through tyranny and some leaders that lead through cooperation and understanding. (just like humans)
On top of that, many of the baboon leaders that led with tyranny often betrayed by its subordinate and killed while sleeping (again, just like human)
I believe the answer is Group entitativity
Group entitavity happen only if all members of that group had eliminated all of their individualistic purposes and live solely to serve the group's goal.
One example of a group entitativity would be the Japanese airforce soldiers during world war II, who were glad to conduct 'Kamikaze' (sacrificing their life by colliding their own planes to enemy's base)
Answer:
The five stages are: 1) Aninut, pre-burial mourning. 2-3) Shivah, a seven-day period following the burial; within the Shivah, the first three days are characterized by a more intense degree of mourning. 4) Shloshim, the 30-day mourning period. 5) The First Year (observed only by the children of the deceased).