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Dame Jane Goodall revolutionised our understanding of our closest primate cousins | Dame Jane Goodall revolutionised our understanding of our closest primate cousins |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Watch: Jane Goodall tells BBC how she became interested in animals | Watch: Jane Goodall tells BBC how she became interested in animals |
She was a serene force of nature. And she never wavered in her mission to help the animals to which she dedicated her life. | She was a serene force of nature. And she never wavered in her mission to help the animals to which she dedicated her life. |
When I interviewed Dame Jane Goodall last year, she exuded calm, even as she pressed home to me that a great extinction crisis was facing our planet. | When I interviewed Dame Jane Goodall last year, she exuded calm, even as she pressed home to me that a great extinction crisis was facing our planet. |
Over a slightly blurry video call, I could see her toy monkey, Mr H, behind her. | Over a slightly blurry video call, I could see her toy monkey, Mr H, behind her. |
That toy was given to her nearly 30 years ago by a friend. Dr Goodall, who was 90 years old when we spoke, was still travelling the world with Mr H at her side. | That toy was given to her nearly 30 years ago by a friend. Dr Goodall, who was 90 years old when we spoke, was still travelling the world with Mr H at her side. |
Researchers I've spoken to this evening, whose work Dr Goodall inspired, or who were simply inspired by her energy, are in shock at her death aged 91. | Researchers I've spoken to this evening, whose work Dr Goodall inspired, or who were simply inspired by her energy, are in shock at her death aged 91. |
Conservationist Dame Jane Goodall dies aged 91 | Conservationist Dame Jane Goodall dies aged 91 |
Professor Cat Hobaiter, from the University of St Andrews, who has worked with Chimpanzees - studying their communication - for more than 15 years, told me that one reason Dr Goodall had such an impact was that "she gave up doing what she loved - spending time with her beloved chimpanzees - to tirelessly travel the world and share her passion with everyone she met." | Professor Cat Hobaiter, from the University of St Andrews, who has worked with Chimpanzees - studying their communication - for more than 15 years, told me that one reason Dr Goodall had such an impact was that "she gave up doing what she loved - spending time with her beloved chimpanzees - to tirelessly travel the world and share her passion with everyone she met." |
In the many years that Jane Goodall observed and studied chimpanzees, she revolutionised our understanding of our closest primate cousins. | In the many years that Jane Goodall observed and studied chimpanzees, she revolutionised our understanding of our closest primate cousins. |
Key to her groundbreaking discoveries were her curiosity and ability - quietly - to observe. | Key to her groundbreaking discoveries were her curiosity and ability - quietly - to observe. |
Dr Goodall "gave up doing what she loved... to tirelessly travel the world and share her passion" | Dr Goodall "gave up doing what she loved... to tirelessly travel the world and share her passion" |
It was during her time in the rainforest reserve at Gombe, in Tanzania, when she stopped to spend time watching a male chimpanzee who was foraging. | It was during her time in the rainforest reserve at Gombe, in Tanzania, when she stopped to spend time watching a male chimpanzee who was foraging. |
The chimp took a twig, bent and stripped it of its leaves, then he poked it into a termite's nest. He then used that stripped, bent twig to spoon the termites into his mouth. | The chimp took a twig, bent and stripped it of its leaves, then he poked it into a termite's nest. He then used that stripped, bent twig to spoon the termites into his mouth. |
That observation - in 1960 - challenged the belief that only humans made and used tools. | That observation - in 1960 - challenged the belief that only humans made and used tools. |
Even as she changed our understanding of the natural world, Dr Goodall faced cynicism and sexism. She was not formally trained as a scientist. And, in the 1960s, that was unusual. | Even as she changed our understanding of the natural world, Dr Goodall faced cynicism and sexism. She was not formally trained as a scientist. And, in the 1960s, that was unusual. |
Her work in Gombe went on to show that chimps also form strong family bonds - and even that they engage in warfare over territory. | Her work in Gombe went on to show that chimps also form strong family bonds - and even that they engage in warfare over territory. |
But her approach – associating so closely with the animals she studied, naming them and even referring to them as "my friends" - made her unpopular with the male-dominated scientific establishment. | But her approach – associating so closely with the animals she studied, naming them and even referring to them as "my friends" - made her unpopular with the male-dominated scientific establishment. |
Her supervisor and mentor, Professor Louis Leakey, saw the value in that informality. | |
"He wanted somebody whose mind wasn't messed up by the reductionist attitude of science to animals," she said. | "He wanted somebody whose mind wasn't messed up by the reductionist attitude of science to animals," she said. |
Dr Goodall was still travelling the world into her 90s with her toy monkey, Mr H, at her side | Dr Goodall was still travelling the world into her 90s with her toy monkey, Mr H, at her side |
Now, the scientific establishment is reeling from the loss of a great scientist. | Now, the scientific establishment is reeling from the loss of a great scientist. |
Adrian Smith, president of the Royal Society, described her as "an amazing scientist who inspired people to see the natural world in a new way". | Adrian Smith, president of the Royal Society, described her as "an amazing scientist who inspired people to see the natural world in a new way". |
Roger Highfield, from the Science Museum in London, which awarded Dr Goodall a fellowship earlier this year, called her an "inspiration". | Roger Highfield, from the Science Museum in London, which awarded Dr Goodall a fellowship earlier this year, called her an "inspiration". |
"She was formidable and it's incredibly shocking news, because she completely changed how we think about other species and how we think about ourselves - she challenged human exceptionalism," he said. | "She was formidable and it's incredibly shocking news, because she completely changed how we think about other species and how we think about ourselves - she challenged human exceptionalism," he said. |
Jane Goodall eventually turned her focus from her chimpanzees to spreading the word about protecting nature. | Jane Goodall eventually turned her focus from her chimpanzees to spreading the word about protecting nature. |
When she spoke to me for BBC Inside Science in 2024, she was promoting a tree-planting and habitat restoration mission that her eponymous foundation was carrying out in Uganda. | When she spoke to me for BBC Inside Science in 2024, she was promoting a tree-planting and habitat restoration mission that her eponymous foundation was carrying out in Uganda. |
"We still have a window of time to slow down climate change and loss of biodiversity," she said at the time. "But it's a window that's closing." | "We still have a window of time to slow down climate change and loss of biodiversity," she said at the time. "But it's a window that's closing." |
Prof Hobaiter, one of the many scientists Dr Goodall inspired, told me: "Jane would be the first person to tell us that what the world needs right now is not sadness over her loss, but to get to work. | |
"We all have a lot to be getting on with to make sure that we are not the last generation to live alongside wild chimpanzees." | "We all have a lot to be getting on with to make sure that we are not the last generation to live alongside wild chimpanzees." |