Jane Goodall embraces technology to save Tanzania's forests

    At 82, Jane Goodall continues her mission of saving the world. The famous ethologist and anthropologist presented, in fact, a new project for mapping the forests of Tanzania.

    He is about to end up run over, his mother saves him

    A 82 years Jane Goodall continues his mission of wanting to save the world. The famous ethologist and anthropologist presented, in fact, a new project for the mapping of the forests of Tanzania which uses cutting-edge technology and devices with the aim of saving the planet.





    Best known for her pioneering studies on chimpanzee behavior, activist Goodall was the first to give monkeys proper names and the one who understood how much these animals, in some actions, mirror mankind.

    Now, thanks also to the help of sophisticated tools, his research focuses on forests of Tanzania, to show the rest of the world how unfortunately they have changed for the worse in recent decades.

    READ also: 10 PHRASES BY JANE GOODALL THAT TEACH US TO RESPECT THE ENVIRONMENT AND ANIMALS

    Using correlated satellite imagery from digital maps and using NASA technology, Jane Goodall is seeking to promote African forest conservation projects. Although apparently tiny and fragile, the researcher has been fighting for the protection of the environment and animals for a lifetime.

    "I really have hope for the future even though I think I have seen more than any other the harm we are doing to the planet," he told the International Union for Conservation of the Naturès World Conservation Congress in Honolulu.

    Jane Goodall embraces technology to save Tanzania's forests

    The new project, carried out together with Lilian Pintea, allows you to see through maps how the forests have changed from the seventies to today and how much vegetation has disappeared.

    READ also: 2050: ARE JANE GOODALL'S 3 CATASTROPHIC FORECASTS ALREADY FULFILLING?

    Jane Goodall embraces technology to save Tanzania's forests

    The activist does not deal directly with the mapping but with traveling the world to make it clear, especially to the youngest, how much it is necessary to do something for our planet. In fact, its program, which began in 1991, has as its objective that of teach children that we must help animals and preserve the environment.


    “In all this work, social media also plays a fundamental role, which used in the right way can unite people all over the world to marry extraordinary causes,” said the ethologist.


    An extraordinary woman who with her words reminds us that we all have the power to make a difference.

    Dominella Trunfio

    add a comment of Jane Goodall embraces technology to save Tanzania's forests
    Comment sent successfully! We will review it in the next few hours.