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the jungle in Tanzania in 1960 to observe chimpanzees, she had
               no formal training in science, and her only work experience was
               as a secretary. “I didn’t know the first thing about studying chimps
               so I had no idea what I would find. They had never been stud-
               ied in the wild before,” she says. “I wasn’t interested in being a
               scientist. I wanted to learn about chimpanzees and write books
               about them, that was all.”  She made ground-
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               breaking discoveries, including the fact
               that chimpanzees use tools, and she
               eventually earned a PhD.                     “I didn’t know the first
                   Sue Hendrickson never got a              thing about studying
               high school diploma but has re-              chimps. . . . I wasn’t inter-
               ceived honorary degrees from                 ested in being a scientist.
               several universities for her work            I wanted to learn about
               in underwater archaeology and                chimpanzees and write
                                                            books about them, that
               paleontology. As a diver, she                was all.” 7
               has explored shipwrecks and re-
               covered artifacts. As a paleontolo-          —Jane Goodall, primatologist
               gist (a scientist who studies fossils),
               she found the world’s largest and most
               complete fossil skeleton of a Tyrannosau-
               rus rex in 1990. The skeleton was named Sue after her and is
               now a major attraction at the Field Museum of Natural History in
               Chicago. “I love the thrill when I find something new,” says Hen-
               drickson. “I’m like a 4-year-old on an egg hunt—I just want to
               find stuff; I don’t care if it’s underwater or on land. I’m addicted
               to looking for and finding things. That’s my true passion in life.”
                                                                                 8
                   Richard Leakey is another adventurer who never got a formal
               education. He grew up in Kenya, where his parents worked as
               paleontologists. Leakey found his first fossil—a jawbone from an
               extinct giant pig—when he was just six years old. He dropped
               out of school at age sixteen but found work on paleontological
               expeditions. By the 1960s he was leading his own expeditions
               and became the director of the National Museum of Kenya. Over
               the following decades, his finds—including early human skulls



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