Jane Goodall: Renowned wildlife advocate, chimpanzee expert dies at 91

The Founding Institute, Jane Goodall, who died at the age of 91, has died at the age of 91, the scientist and global activist, who turned his childhood into a lifetime -long quest to protect the environment.
Jane Goodall Institute said that Goodall died for natural reasons in a social media mission.
“As an ethologist, Dr. Goodall revolutionized science, and he was an insurmountable advocate for the preservation and restoration of our natural world,” he said.
The primatologist-Turksuned-consumption expert, the love of wild life, from a British village by the sea to Africa, and then in the search for better understanding of chimpanzees around the world and people in the role of people’s living spaces and planet health in general role in the role.
Goodall was both a female scientist in the 1960s and a pioneer in his field for studying the behavior of primates.
He also attracted the people in partnership with the National Geographic Society to bring their beloved chimpanzees to their lives with films, TVs and magazines.
He raised the scientific norms of the time, gave chimpanze names instead of numbers, observed different personalities, and included family relationships and emotions in their work.
He also found that they used tools like people.
“After all, we found that there was no sharp line that separates people from the rest of the animal kingdom,” he said in his 2002 TED speech.
As his career developed, he witnessed the destruction of widespread habitat, he shifted his focus from primatology to climate advocacy and called on the world to take a quick and urgent action on climate change.
“We forget that this is a part of the natural world,” he said to CNN in 2020.
“It still has a time window.”
In 2003, one of the British Empire was appointed and in 2025, the US Presidency received the Freedom Medal.



