Of course, there are 100 men who can have a dog on silver back, suffering serious losses, only the possibility of suffocating and struggling, while it struggles to tear the piles of people.
However, this relies heavily on teamwork and a handful of unlikely martyrs.
We can do better. In fact, we can defeat the gorilla with less than five casualties.
Here's how:
Before overheating, the silverback can only sprint 30-100 feet (at 25 mph).
It also "runs" at about 4-5 mph, not very long (only a few minutes).
These animals were not built for endurance. Their incredibly dense muscle mass requires obscene energy to maintain, while the intense activity is exhausted is relatively less.
However, the average person can sprint at least twice as fast as he is on the verge of extinction.
But where we lack sprint speed, we make up for unparalleled endurance. Our average speed is 6-8 mph, and if their lives depend on it, most men can keep at least one mile.
In fact, human endurance is almost unparalleled in the animal world. Only animals that are specifically bred for endurance, such as horses, camels and sled dogs, have comparable endurance and endurance.
This is why hunters are often able to stroll cheetahs. The cheetah will be completely exhausted before the hunter.
Again, with gorillas.
To make men easily surpass gorillas, they need about a 100-foot-long start. Once they have a 100-foot berth, it's nearly impossible for a gorilla to catch up with a running/jogging person.
Yes, we may see some casualties. These people will need about 15 seconds of stamina to overcome the gorilla's speed advantage.
In a minute of that quarter, one or two men may be thrown, thrown or crippled.
But after that, these people can reasonably laugh at and use up the gorilla, maintaining 75-100 feet for several hours (even if it is absolutely necessary for a day or two) until the gorilla is exhausted.
Aside from fewer deaths, the main benefit is that this is much more feasible than the dog method