HomeTriviaHistoryJane Goodall
person📜 History

Jane Goodall Trivia Questions

How much do you really know about Jane Goodall? Below are 16 true or false statements. Click each one to reveal the answer and explanation.

1.

Jane Goodall once served as a UN Messenger of Peace.

Click to reveal answer ›

Easy
✓ TRUE

She was appointed a UN Messenger of Peace in 2002, focusing on conservation and environmental issues.

2.

Goodall has said that her favorite chimpanzee was named David Greybeard, the first to trust her.

Click to reveal answer ›

Easy
✓ TRUE

David Greybeard was the chimp who first let her approach closely and allowed her to observe tool use; she called him her 'doorway into the chimpanzee world.'

3.

Goodall discovered that chimpanzees use tools, but only when they are taught by humans.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

Goodall observed wild chimpanzees making and using tools, like twigs for termite fishing, without human teaching—a groundbreaking finding.

4.

Jane Goodall's first scientific paper on chimpanzees was rejected because she used 'he' and 'she' instead of 'it'.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

Nature merely asked her to change the pronouns to 'it', but after she and Leakey insisted, the paper was published with 'he' and 'she'. It was never rejected.

5.

Goodall originally planned to be a veterinarian but switched to primatology after failing chemistry in college.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

Goodall never planned to be a vet; she dreamed of living in Africa and studying animals from childhood. Lacking funds for college, she worked as a secretary before meeting Louis Leakey, who trained her in primatology.

6.

Jane Goodall never married and has no children, dedicating her entire life to chimpanzees.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

She married twice (first a Dutch photographer, then a Tanzanian park director) and had one son, Hugo, who often accompanied her in the field as a child.

7.

Jane Goodall was once a secretary for a famous paleontologist before her work with chimpanzees.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✓ TRUE

Before her groundbreaking chimpanzee research, Goodall worked as a secretary for paleontologist Louis Leakey, who later sponsored her work at Gombe.

8.

Jane Goodall discovered that chimpanzees use tools, but she later admitted the finding was accidental.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

The discovery was deliberate and systematic—she observed chimps stripping leaves to fish for termites. It was not an accident; it revolutionized primatology.

9.

Goodall believes that chimpanzees can learn to speak human language fluently.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

Goodall has stated that chimpanzees lack the vocal anatomy for human speech, though they communicate with gestures and sounds.

10.

Jane Goodall began her famous chimpanzee research without any formal scientific training.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✓ TRUE

She had only a secretarial qualification and no university science background when Louis Leakey selected her for the Gombe study in 1960.

11.

Goodall named her first research chimpanzee ‘David Greybeard’ because of his silver chin.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✓ TRUE

David Greybeard was the first chimp to trust Goodall, and she named him for his distinctive silver chin hair.

12.

Goodall's mother accompanied her to Gombe because the British authorities refused to let a young woman go alone.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✓ TRUE

In 1960, the British officials required a chaperone, so her mother Vanne spent four months with her at the Gombe camp, cooking and treating malaria.

13.

Jane Goodall’s research was initially rejected by male scientists because she was a woman.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✗ FALSE

While she faced some skepticism, her work was largely championed by Louis Leakey and published quickly; gender wasn’t the main barrier.

14.

Goodall was the first person to ever observe a chimpanzee eating meat.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✗ FALSE

Other researchers had seen chimps eat meat before, but Goodall was the first to document systematic hunting and the sharing of prey, revealing their omnivorous nature.

15.

Jane Goodall has a degree in ethology from the University of Cambridge.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✓ TRUE

Goodall earned a PhD in ethology from Cambridge in 1966, despite not having a bachelor's degree at the time.

16.

Goodall’s initial research was funded by the National Geographic Society and the U.S. government.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✗ FALSE

Her early work was funded by the Leakeys and the National Geographic Society, not the U.S. government.

More in History

Neil ArmstrongTrivia Questions →Moon LandingTrivia Questions →Apollo 11 Moon LandingTrivia Questions →Fall of the Berlin WallTrivia Questions →Marie CurieTrivia Questions →
View all History topics →

Want to test yourself in real time?

Swipe right for True, left for False. New questions every day on PopBluff.

Play PopBluff Free →