Jane Goodall, world-renowned ‘primatologist’, dies aged 91

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ER Editor: An MSM alert for any reporting done on this Establishment Depopulationist and proud speaker at the World Economic Forum. Some tweets on that very topic —

Interesting comment. Was she just plucked out of the Establishment families to be useful to their agenda?

And we wonder: did she die when they said she did? This Sky News report is jokeworthy for the number of globalists paying their tributes. Many of them, if not all, will no longer be around.

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Jane Goodall, world-renowned primatologist, dies aged 91

Jane Goodall Institute says ‘tireless advocate’ for natural world died in California during US speaking tour

MATTY EDWARDS for THE GUARDIAN

The world-renowned primatologist Jane Goodall has died at the age of 91, her institute has said.

The Jane Goodall Institute announced that she had died of natural causes while in California as part of a US speaking tour.

“Dr Goodall’s discoveries as an ethologist revolutionised science,” the statement read. “She was a tireless advocate for the protection and restoration of our natural world.”

Born in London in 1934, Goodall began researching free-living chimpanzees in Tanzania in 1960. In 1977 she founded the Jane Goodall Institute, which works to protect the species and supports youth projects aimed at benefiting animals and the environment.

She was considered the leading expert on chimpanzees, her career spanning more than 60 years. Her research was pivotal in proving the similarities in primate and human behaviour.

The renowned conservationist was on stage in New York just last week, before appearing talking about her work on a Wall Street Journal podcast two days later.

She was due to appear at a speaking event reflecting on her long life and career in Los Angeles on 3 October, before another event in Washington DC the following week.

Tributes poured in from around the world from conservation and animal rights charities, as the UN praised how she had “worked tirelessly for our planet and all its inhabitants, leaving an extraordinary legacy for humanity and nature”.

Greenpeace UK’s co-executive director, Will McCallum, said Goodall was “one of the true conservation giants of our time”.

After developing a love of animals from an early age, Goodall visited a friend in Kenya in the late 1950s and began working for an archaeologist there, who sent her to study primate behaviour in London.

While still in her 20s, Goodall began researching chimpanzees at Gombe Stream national park in Tanzania. Her work observing their social behaviour helped challenge the idea that only humans could use tools and that chimps were vegetarian.

She went on to set up the Jane Goodall Institute to improve the understanding and treatment of primates, and to protect their natural habitats with the help of local people. It now has officers in more than 25 countries around the world.

Goodall, who was awarded the title of Messenger of Peace by the UN in 2002, was an outspoken advocate of environmental issues and campaigned against the use of animals in medical research and zoos.

Jane Goodall holding binoculars in a closeup shot in the jungle
Jane Goodall in the 1965 CBS television special Miss Goodall and the World of Chimpanzees. Photograph: CBS Photo Archive/CBS/Getty Images
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In 1991, the institute launched the Roots and Shoots project to involve young people in conservation. The project started with a group of students working with Goodall but went on to create a network of active young people across nearly 100 countries.

Earlier this year, the institute’s Hope Through Action project faced funding cuts from the US government under Donald Trump, after it had been pledged $29.5m (£22m) over five years. (ER: Hmm.)

The initiative was designed to protect endangered chimpanzees and their habitats in western Tanzania through reforestation and “community-led methodology” to conserve biodiversity and improve local livelihoods.

Well into her 80s, Goodall showed little sign of slowing down as she continued to write and speak about her work. During the pandemic, she launched a podcast called Hopecast in which she interviewed other environmentalists and activists.

She was made a dame in 2004, and earlier this year received the Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honour, from the outgoing president, Joe Biden. In 2022, her legacy was marked in more unusual fashion in the form of a Jane Goodall Barbie doll, as part of the producer’s series on inspiring women.

In a 2023 interview with the Guardian, she spoke of the importance of focusing on making any kind of difference rather than trying to solve the world’s problems.

“We have a window of time to change this planet’s course, but it’s rapidly closing,” she said. “If governments do what they say they’ll do, we still have a chance.”

CONTINUE READING HERE

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