Jane Goodall Keeps Observation At Science Center follows Saturday's jane goodall made science by naming what she watched by keeping the profile attached to one observed act. History's account says Goodall saw David Greybeard make and use a tool on November 4, 1960, stripping leaves from a straw stick and inserting it into a termite mound to extract insects [1]. It also quotes Louis Leakey's response: redefine tool, redefine man, or accept chimpanzees as human [1].
That is the narrow scientific claim. The brief does not need to turn Goodall into a complete biography. The Jane Goodall Institute homepage fetch surfaced mostly site chrome, so this piece uses it only as the institutional source for the continuing organization that carries her name [2]. National Geographic's education resource supplies the fuller classroom frame: Goodall worked at Gombe Stream National Park, challenged conventional ideas by observing chimpanzee tool use, meat-eating, and tool-making, and later shifted into conservation through the Jane Goodall Institute and Roots & Shoots [3].
The profile remains a science-center item because the public lesson is methodological. Goodall's record begins with patient field observation, names, notes, and a claim modest enough to verify. The sources support that profile frame without requiring new claims about current programming or institutional strategy.
-- KENJI NAKAMURA, Tokyo