41

Click here to load reader

Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 2: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Jane Goodall was born on April 3, 1934 in London in a family of middle class, growing up in the postwar period in the family home in Bournemouth, southern England.

Page 3: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

There lived his childhood and youth, surrounded by animals and dreaming write about animals in Africa. At 23 he began to realize his dream traveling to Kenya, where he worked with famed anthropologist Louis Leakey, until he sent in 1960 to Gombe, Tanzania, with the risky mission to investigate first wild chimpanzees zone. With the sole company of his mother and a cook, he pitched his tent in the jungle and began his research project that in theory would last 6 months and already extended by more than half a century.

Page 4: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Dr. Jane Goodall is a legend. She is a science hero, a trailblazing researcher who inspires people around the world.

Page 5: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 6: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 7: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 8: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Favorite readings of Jane during her childhood were books about the life of animals, such as The Jungle Book, which undoubtedly contributed to ten years and lies and dreams of going to Africa, live among the animals and write about they.

Page 9: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 10: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 11: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

In 1957, twenty-three years just fulfilled, after studying secretarial and work in a company of documentaries in England, and thanks to the invitation of a friend to move to Nairobi, he could travel to Africa, although before, to afford the passage, worked several months as a waitress.

Page 12: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 13: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 14: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 15: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 16: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 17: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 18: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 19: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 20: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Kenya came into contact with the famous anthropologist Louis Leakey (1903-1972) and although did not have the appropriate academic background, after expressing his interest in the study of animals, was hired as an assistant, and traveled with him and his wife (archeologist Mary Leakey) to the Olduvai gorge for fossils of hominids.

Page 21: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 22: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

In 1964 he married photographer from the National Geographic Society Baron Hugo van Lawick (whom he divorced in 1974), author of the most famous images of anthropologist and who in 1967, his only son, Hugo Eric Louis, Grub would.

Page 23: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 24: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 25: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

In 1977 he founded the institute that bears his name, Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education and Conservation, whose main objective is to promote conservation programs for the species and improving the living conditions of chimpanzees.

Page 26: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 27: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 28: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 29: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 30: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 31: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 32: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 33: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Jane Goodall's efforts are fully justified, since the populations of these primates have fallen alarmingly, and continued, in recent decades. Today, it is estimated that there are about 100,000 chimpanzees, bonobos 20,000 50,000 orangutans, gorillas 120,000 coast and lowlands and only 600 mountain gorillas. They hunt them for their meat and to use their bodies as sexual stimulants and traditional medicine preparations

Page 34: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 35: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 36: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 37: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 38: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

The field work of Jane Goodall have led to numerous discoveries concerning the habits of chimpanzees, as the use and manufacture of tools and subsequent transmission of traditions that takes it rigged, the omnivorism about animals considered for years exclusively herbivorous, and discovery, observation and study of behavior adoption, cannibalism, establishing relationships and social structure.

Page 39: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 40: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life
Page 41: Jane Goodall ~ Passion for Life

Jane Goodall is Doctor in Ethology from Cambridge University and Doctor Honoris Causa by more than 45 universities worldwide, including two Spanish institutions.

He has been honored with over 100 international awards, including the Prince of Asturias Award for Research in 2003 in Spain, the Catalonia International Prize 2015, the Legion of Honor of the Republic of France, and the title of Dame of the British Empire. Similarly, he was awarded the Hubbard Medal of the National Geographic Society, the prestigious Kyoto Prize in Japan, the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Life Sciences, the Gandhi / King Award for Non-Violence, and the Gold Medal UNESCO. In April 2002, Secretary General Kofi Annan appointed Dr. Goodall like "Messenger of Peace" UN, and was confirmed in his mission in 2007 by the Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. In 2009 he was appointed as an official sponsor of the Year of the Gorilla, by the UN.

END05-JUNIO-2016