According to an article called, “Inventors and Scientists: Jane Goodall,” written by Cynthia Stokes Brown, Jane Goodall was amazed by animals since she was young. Since she had a liking for animals, in 1950 she met Louis Leakey who was famous for seeking hominin bones. After all, he hired her. As her job she observed how chimpanzees behaved and survived out in nature. This led her to notice how chimpanzees act very similar to humans. In 1986 she wrote her definitive scientific work, The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior. This book described how chimpanzees had both and good actions. in 1976 she founded the Jane Goodall Institute. This foundation supported research and efforts to protect chimpanzees and their habitats. Also out of a meeting that she had with 16 teens, she organized Roots and Shoots. This organization is a global youth program that now has more than 100 groups in the countries. After all the hard work she did to protect the chimpanzees and their homes, in 2002 she was named the United Nation Messenger of…