On July 16,1960, Jane Goodall, a 26 -year -old former secretary from England, began to study the behaviour of chimpanzees in the wild. Until that time, scientists had mostly observed and studied chimpanzees in laboratories and zoos. Few scientists had gone to study chimpanzees in the remote areas of Africa where the chimps live. When scientists had studied the chimpanzees in the wild, they hadn’ t spent long periods of time observing them. Jane Goodall planned to watch chimpanzees in Africa over a ten - year period and see exactly how they behaved. She was not a professional scientist when she started out. Her book, In the Shadow of Man, tells how she began her project and what she discovered. As Goodall said in 1973, "I had no qualifications at all. I was just somebody with a love of animals." Her love of animals drew her to Africa where she met Dr. Louis S.B. Leakey. Leakey was a world - famous scientist who was studying how prehistoric people lived. Since chimpanzees are humans’ closest living relatives, Leakey thought prehistoric people might have lived in the same ways that chimps live today. Leakey told Goodall that studying chimps might give clues about the way that early people lived. Leakey asked Goodall to study the chimps on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Mrica. The chimps were very shy and the country was very difficult to travel through. Goodall took on the difficult job of finding and watching the chimpanzees.
On July 16,1960, Jane Goodall, a 26 -year -old former secretary from England, began to study the behaviour of chimpanzees in the wild. Until that time, scientists had mostly observed and studied chimpanzees in laboratories and zoos. Few scientists had gone to study chimpanzees in the remote areas of Africa where the chimps live. When scientists had studied the chimpanzees in the wild, they hadn’ t spent long periods of time observing them. Jane Goodall planned to watch chimpanzees in Africa over a ten - year period and see exactly how they behaved. She was not a professional scientist when she started out. Her book, In the Shadow of Man, tells how she began her project and what she discovered.
As Goodall said in 1973, "I had no qualifications at all. I was just somebody with a love of animals." Her love of animals drew her to Africa where she met Dr. Louis S.B. Leakey. Leakey was a world - famous scientist who was studying how prehistoric people lived. Since chimpanzees are humans’ closest living relatives, Leakey thought prehistoric people might have lived in the same ways that chimps live today. Leakey told Goodall that studying chimps might give clues about the way that early people lived.
Leakey asked Goodall to study the chimps on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Mrica. The chimps were very shy and the country was very difficult to travel through. Goodall took on the difficult job of finding and watching the chimpanzees.
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You are the network consultant from passguide.com. Do you know what attacks are software based attacks that disable your computer and attack user by e-mail?()
A.Virus B.Worm C.Trojan D.Executable
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