Jane Goodall's research in Tanzania during the 1960s revealed that chimpanzees use tools to extract insects from trees, challenging the long-held scientific belief that only humans use tools and fundamentally transforming our understanding of animal intelligence and the connection between humans and animals.
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Jane Goodall and the chimpanzees that changed scienceJAñadido:
What if humans aren't as different from animals as we once believed?
A personal note.
My childhood memories of exciting stories about people trying to understand animals are shaped by Konrad Lorenz and the graylag geese, Dian Fossey and the gorilla, and the great Jane Goodall.
In the 1960s, Jane Goodall began studying chimpanzees in Tanzania.
At the time, scientists believed that only humans use tools.
But Goodall observed something surprising.
Chimpanzees were using sticks to extract insects from trees.
This discovery changed how we understand animals and ourselves.
She also showed that chimpanzees have emotions, social bonds, and complex behaviors.
Her work transformed primatology and conservation.
Jane Goodall didn't just study animals.
She helped us see our connection to them.
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