-
BTS concert drew 18.4 million viewers, says Netflix
-
OSCE's 'chaotic' Ukraine evacuation put staff at risk: leaked report
-
Top WTO official sounds fertiliser warning over Middle East war
-
France and Brazil weigh up World Cup prospects in glamour friendly
-
Italy hoping to end World Cup pain as play-offs loom
-
Dirty diapers born again in Japan recycling breakthrough
-
Verstappen's Japan GP win streak under threat as Mercedes dominate
-
Crude tumbles, stocks rally on hopes for Iran war de-escalation
-
Gauff outlasts Bencic to reach Miami semi-finals
-
'Hero' Australian dog who saved 100 koalas retires
-
Underdogs chase World Cup berths in Mexico playoff tournament
-
Pope heads to tiny Catholic Monaco
-
Meet the four astronauts set to voyage around the Moon
-
Artemis 2 Moon mission: a primer
-
It's go time: historic Moon mission set for lift-off
-
Denmark's PM Mette Frederiksen, tenacious and tough on migration
-
OpenAI kills Sora video app in pivot toward business tools
-
Danish PM's left-wing bloc wins election, but no majority
-
Brazil court grants house arrest for jailed Bolsonaro
-
Sinner downs Michelsen to reach Miami Open quarter-finals
-
Advantage Arsenal in women's Champions League quarter-final against Chelsea
-
Garner dreams of World Cup glory in bid to replicate England under-21 success
-
New Mexico jury finds Meta liable for endangering children
-
Huge crowd in Buenos Aires marks 50 years since Argentina's coup
-
Oil, stock trading spiked before Trump's Iran remarks
-
Colombia military plane crash death toll rises to 69
-
Trump adds Columbus statue, walkway in latest White House makeover
-
Toronto unveils upgraded World Cup venue after fan scorn
-
Beerensteyn goal gives Wolfsburg edge over Lyon in women's Champions League
-
Gang crackdown carried out without 'abuses,' Guatemalan defense chief says
-
Afghanistan releases detained US citizen
-
Danish PM's left bloc leads election, but no majority
-
'Illustrious' Salah to leave Liverpool at the end of the season
-
Trump says Iran gave US 'gift' linked to Strait of Hormuz
-
US officials downplay controller 'distraction' in New York crash
-
Salah to leave Liverpool at the end of the season
-
Trump has destroyed Venezuela's socialist ideology: opposition leader
-
France urges Israel 'to refrain' from seizing south Lebanon zone
-
UN rights council to hold urgent debate on Iran's Gulf strikes
-
Russia rains drones on Ukraine, killing eight, hitting UNESCO site
-
Lukaku to miss Belgium World Cup warm-up trip to US
-
Data canary shows economy already suffering from Middle East war
-
ConocoPhillips chief seeks extra US protection of Mideast assets
-
Oil prices jump as Trump's Iran claims raise doubts
-
In world first, antimatter taken on test drive at CERN
-
New Chile president withdraws support for Bachelet UN chief bid
-
Mammals cannot be cloned infinitely, mice study discovers
-
600-year-old pinot noir grape found in medieval French toilet
-
NASA to build $20 bn moon base, pause orbital lunar station plans
-
Czech 'arks' help preserve Ukraine's cultural heritage
Jane Goodall: crusader for chimpanzees and the planet
British primatologist Jane Goodall imitated chimpanzees, sat with them in trees and shared their bananas during her trail-blazing research in Tanzania into the apes' true nature.
Acclaimed for her discoveries she later morphed into a wildlife crusader, criss-crossing the world to plead the cause of human's closest ape relatives and the wider planet.
She died, aged 91, while conducting a speaking tour in the United States, her institute said Wednesday.
Clad in her classic collared shirt and shorts, binoculars in hand, Goodall transformed human understanding of chimpanzees.
She was the first researcher to give them names, rather than numbers.
She was also the first scientist to observe that the apes, like humans, use tools and feel emotions.
Fellow naturalist and friend David Attenborough told Britain's Daily Telegraph in 2010 she was "a woman who had turned the world of zoology upside down".
Her scientific breakthroughs "have profoundly altered the world's view of animal intelligence and enriched our understanding of humanity", the head of the US-based John Templeton Foundation said in 2021 when awarding her its prestigious individual lifetime achievement award.
- Termites and twigs -
Born on April 3, 1934, in London, Goodall's love of wild animals began in infancy, when her father gave her a stuffed toy chimpanzee, which she kept for the rest of her life.
She was also a fan of Tarzan books, about a boy raised in the jungle by apes who falls in love with a woman called Jane.
"When I was 10, I dreamed of going to Africa, living with animals and writing books about them," she told CNN in 2017.
In 1957 she took up a friend's invitation to visit Kenya, where she began working for famed palaeontologist Louis Leakey.
Her big break came when Leakey sent her to study chimpanzees in the wild in Tanzania, becoming the first of three women he appointed to study great apes in their natural habitat, along with America's Dian Fossey (gorillas) and Canada's Birute Galdikas (orangutans).
Despite Goodall's lack of scientific training, Leakey "felt her passion for and knowledge of animals and nature, high energy, and fortitude made her a great candidate to study the chimpanzees," according to National Geographic magazine, which featured Goodall on its cover in 1965.
It was in Gombe National Park that Goodall famously witnessed a male whom she called David Greybeard using a grass stalk to fish termites out of a termite mound.
She later saw Greybeard and a second animal, Goliath, stripping leaves off a twig to turn it into a better tool for digging out termites.
On the strength of her discoveries Leakey packed Goodall off to Cambridge University for doctoral research.
She became only the eighth person to earn a PhD at Cambridge without first possessing an undergraduate degree.
- From scientist to activist -
Her life as an activist began at a US conference on chimpanzees in the 1980s, where she heard accounts of endangered chimpanzees being used in medical research, snared for bush meat and having their habitats destroyed.
"I went in as a scientist happily learning about chimpanzee behaviour... but I left that conference as an activist," Goodall told an audience in Nairobi in 2013.
Her unique insights into the animal world -- she livened up conferences with her renditions of chimpanzee calls in Gombe Park, to which she regularly returned -- got people to sit up and take notice.
When she "knocks at somebody's door they come," said Ian Redmond, chair of the Ape Alliance, a coalition of conservation groups.
In 1977 Goodall founded an institute in her name to further the study of chimpanzees and in 1991 created the Roots and Shoots project, which works with young people in over 60 countries on environmental issues.
- Barbie doll -
In 1964, Goodall married Dutch photographer Hugo van Lawick, who had immortalised her and her chimpanzees in National Geographic and LIFE magazines. A model of David Greybeard graced the wedding cake.
The couple had a son Hugo Eric Louis Van Lawick, nicknamed Grub.
Goodall married her second husband Derek Bryceson, a former director of Tanzania's national parks and MP, in 1975. Five years later Bryceson died of cancer.
In April 2002, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan named her a United Nations Messenger of Peace, and she became a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2004.
She has a Barbie doll named after her, complete with binoculars, safari outfit and chimpanzee.
burs/jmy/cb
N.Esteves--PC