Her groundbreaking chimpanzee research in Tanzania reshaped science and inspired a global conservation movement.

Jane Goodall, the legendary primatologist and conservationist who revolutionized the study of primates, has died at 91. Her death marks the end of an era in wildlife research and global conservation. Goodall first gained worldwide attention in the 1960s for her groundbreaking observations of chimpanzees in Tanzania, where she documented behaviors once thought uniquely human. Over the decades, she expanded her work into environmental advocacy, becoming a leading voice for conservation and animal welfare whose influence will endure for generations.








