Francisco Moreno was an Argentine naturalist, explorer, anthropologist, and geographer in the late 19th century
@Naturalist, Family and Childhood
Francisco Moreno was an Argentine naturalist, explorer, anthropologist, and geographer in the late 19th century
Francisco Moreno born at
He married María Ana Varela in 1885 and raised a family with her.
He died on November 22, 1919, in Buenos Aires, at the age of 67.
Francisco Pascasio Moreno was born on May 31, 1852, in Buenos Aires, to Francisco and Juana Thwaites Madero. His family was an influential one and his father was one of the founding members of the influential Club del Progreso, secretary of the Buenos Aires Commerce Stock Market, director of the Buenos Aires Province Bank, and member of the Argentine parliament.
Francisco Moreno was interested in collecting artifacts and fossils from a young age and created a homemade museum of his extensive collections when he was 14. He studied in local parochial schools and graduated in 1872. He did not attend university and began working in the family’s insurance companies.
Due to his family’s connections, he became part of Argentina’s learned societies and political networks and participated in the founding of the Argentine Scientific Society in 1872.
Francisco Moreno embarked on a series of explorations in the 1870s. The first one of these was a survey of Río Negro Territory, a hitherto largely uncharted territory. He explored the valleys of Patagonia and the Argentinean Northwest, and reached Lake Nahuel-Huapi in the southern Andes in 1876.
He collected objects of natural history and archeological interest in his travels. In February 1877, he discovered Lake San Martín and explored numerous rivers in Patagonia. In March the same year, he discovered and named Mount Fitz Roy.
On his return, he presented his collections to the Province of Buenos Aires for the purpose of establishing an archaeological and anthropological museum. The museum was inaugurated in August 1878.
He visited France in 1880 where he spoke at a meeting of the Anthropology Society of Paris. He had unearthed two prehistoric skulls in the Rio Negro territory and discussed their possible origins at the meeting. He believed one skull was from the Quaternary period while the other bore marks of ritual deformation in a manner similar to the skulls of the Aymara people of the Andes and Altiplano.
Soon after returning to Argentina, he embarked on his second major expedition to the territory of Patagonia. He explored the Lake Nahuel along with his team when they were taken prisoners by a Tehuelche aboriginal tribe. He was condemned to death but he made a daring escape barely a day before his planned execution.
In 1888, Francisco Moreno founded the La Plata Museum, a natural history museum in La Plata, Argentina, which is counted amongst the most important of its kind in the world. It receives around 400,000 visitors every year, including a thousand visiting researchers.