Jared Mason Diamond is an American scientist and author reputed for his highly acclaimed and popular science books.
@Scientists, Timeline and Family
Jared Mason Diamond is an American scientist and author reputed for his highly acclaimed and popular science books.
Jared Diamond born at
He is married to Marie Cohen, the granddaughter of Polish statesman Edward Werner.
Their twin sons were born in 1987.
He was born on September 10, 1937, in Boston, Massachusetts, in a Jewish family to Louis Diamond and his wife Flora Kaplan. His father was a physician while his mother a linguist, school teacher and a concert pianist. They both hailed from families who migrated to the US from East Europe.
Diamond started learning the piano when he was just six. He studied at the ‘Roxbury Latin School’, the oldest school of North America located at Roxbury, Massachusetts. Since his childhood he started learning languages beginning with Greek and Latin at his school and by the time he was in his 60s he learned his twelfth language, which is Italian.
He was introduced to reading and writing by his mother and eventually he started loving to write weekly compositions that were checked by his mother. This affinity for writing remained with him forever.
He was interested in mathematics and was enthusiastic about birds which hinted his knack towards biology and hence science. As a young boy he aspired to become a physician like his father.
After school he joined the ‘Harvard College’ in Cambridge, Massachusetts, one of the most prestigious institutes in the world and the oldest in the US. In 1958 he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in anthropology and history from the institute. Apart from science he also did courses on music composition, history of the American Revolution, German and Russian languages and that of oral epic poetry from the institute.
Following his PhD he rejoined Harvard and remained there as a Junior Fellow till 1965, initially pursuing physiological research work in the Biophysical Laboratory of Harvard Medical School. He studied the cellular and molecular devices of ion and non-electrolyte transportation across biological membranes particularly across those of the gall bladder.
He embarked on his second career encompassing evolutionary biology and ecology following his 1964 summer trip to New Guinea, the large tropical island located at the South West Pacific region. This and many other subsequent trips to the island changed his life and had a great impact on his general perspective.
He made around 22 expeditions to New Guinea and its neighbouring islands and studied the ecology and evolution of birds. Over the years he dedicated much of his time and effort as a conservationist and thrived to eliminate the ill effects of the changes he witnessed in New Guinea that affected the people, birds and forests of the island.
In this pursuit he came up with comprehensive plans, most of which were materialised including designing national park systems for the governments of Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Indonesian New Guinea.
He was part of a number of field projects in Australia, Africa, North America, South America and Asia. He also participated in several field projects of the government of Indonesia and the ‘World Wildlife Fund’, the leading organization in conservation of wildlife and endangered species. At present he serves as one of the directors of ‘World Wildlife Fund’.