![]() As for that stuffed toy, Jubilee still sits on Goodall's dresser in London. Through her work at Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania and her own Roots and Shoots program she has become a tireless advocate for animals and the planet. After Goodall recovered from the death of her husband, she wrote her definitive scientific work, The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior (1986). During her expeditions she braved many dangers and she got to know an amazing group of wild chimpanzees-intelligent animals whose lives, in work and play and family relationships, bear a surprising resemblance to our own. Jane dreamed of a life spent working with animals, and when she was twenty-six years old, she ventured into the forests of Africa to observe chimpanzees in the wild. ![]() others thought Jane would be terrified by the toy, she adored it and it inspired a life-long love of animals in her. ![]() As a child, Jane Goodall was given a stuffed chimpanzee named Jubilee, and she has said her fondness for this figure started her early love of animals. ![]() Inspired by a stuffed toy, Jane Goodall became the first woman to study chips in the wild and in the process made history. (Trade Paperback / Paperback, Revised edition) ![]()
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