Louis Leakey was a Kenyan-British anthropologist who findings greatly altered conceptions about the origins and course of the evolution of human life
@Paleoanthropologist, Birthday and Facts
Louis Leakey was a Kenyan-British anthropologist who findings greatly altered conceptions about the origins and course of the evolution of human life
Louis Leakey born at
Louis Leakey married Frida Avern in 1928. The couple had two children.
In 1933, when Leakey's wife Frida was pregnant with their second child, he met Mary Nicol, a young illustrator fascinated with archaeology and paleontology. The two began an affair.
Leakey created a public scandal by divorcing Frida and marrying Mary in 1936. Together, he and Mary would have three sons.
Louis Leakey was born on August 7, 1903, in Kabete, Kenya, to English missionaries Harry and Mary Leakey. He grew up in Africa, surrounded by the Kikuyu tribe, steeped much more in African ways than in those of the English.
Leakey found some stone tools in 1916, when he was 13, and he wanted to learn about those who created the tools. This discovery was the catalyst that fueled his lifelong passion for studying prehistory.
In 1922, Leakey began studying in St. John's College, Cambridge University, England. However, his studies were interrupted by an injury suffered during a rugby match.
Leakey took up studies at Cambridge University again in 1925, and one year later, he was awarded degrees in both anthropology and archaeology. Four years later, Leakey earned his doctorate in African prehistory.
During 1923 and 1924, while recovering from a sports-related injury, Louis Leakey took on the management of a paleontological expedition in Africa.
In 1930, Leakey's ideas about the origin of the human species differed from conventional ideas. While the general school of thought had humans originating in Asia, due to the remains of the so-called Java Man, Leakey held fast to Charles Darwin's theories that humans had originated in Africa.
Leakey made his first visit to Olduvai Gorge, in modern-day Tanzania, in 1931. In the future, Leakey and this site would become inextricably linked and his finds here would become famous.
Leakey discovered fossils in 1932 at Kanam and Kanjera, Africa. He then hailed these finds, which he called the oldest direct ancestors of modern humans, as concrete proof that humanity arose on the African continent.
In 1937, Leakey left England, where he had been working and lecturing, and returned to Africa for a rigorous ethnological study of the Kikuyu tribe.
Louis Leakey is credited with making several major advances in the fields of archaeology and anthropology. They include finding fossils which demonstrated human development began on the African continent, that there were concurrent developing species of early hominids, and finally that human development was much more complicated than previously thought.
Leakey was a prolific author who wrote many books, including: Adam's Ancestors (1934); Stone-Age Africa (1936); White African (1937, memoir); Olduvai Gorge (1952); Mau Mau and the Kikuyu (1952); Olduvai Gorge, 1951–61 (1965); Unveiling Man's Origins (1969, with Jane Goodall); Animals of East Africa (1969); and By the Evidence: Memoirs, 1932-1951 (1974, memoir).