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Meave Leakey
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Paleoanthropologist Zoologist
 
Meave Leakey Dr. Meave Leakey is the standard-bearer of a family of paleoanthropologists who have dominated their field since the beginning of the 20th Century. For 70 years, the Leakeys have been searching in Africa for clues to the origins of our earliest ancestors. Dr. Leakey’s field and lab work have established her as one of the most visible and distinguished scientists in a highly competitive and male-dominated profession.

Dr. Leakey’s research team at Lake Turkana, Kenya made a discovery in 1999 that completely redefined our understanding of early human ancestry: a 3.5 million-year-old skull and partial jaw (which she named Kenyanthropus platyops, or flat-faced man of Kenya) said to belong to a new branch of our early human family.
 
Book Cover
Announced in the journal, Nature, and the subject of a front-page story in The New York Times, this amazing discovery drew international attention, re-ignited the discussion of our ancient origins and challenged the view that human beings descended from a single line of evolution. Reflecting on the fossil record and the search for new clues about how humans evolved, Leakey says there is much more to learn. “It’s like a jigsaw puzzle in three dimensions with no end to it.”

Dr. Leakey now co-directs the fieldwork in Lake Turkana with her daughter, Dr. Louise Leakey, focusing on the origins of our own genus Homo and the emergence of Homo erectus, the first human ancestor to move out of Africa.

A masterful storyteller, Dr. Leakey conveys the importance of studying our origins with vivid images and real-life stories of her fieldwork in Africa. “We are one species that originated in Africa,” says Dr. Leakey, “If we can understand our past, we can better understand our future.”
 

...Dr. Leakey was fantastic! We sold out the event and the talk was amazing. I was especially touched by the number of young women who approached you after your lecture. You certainly are an inspiration for all young people considering future careers in science
Ontario Science Center

After completing her first degree at the University of North Wales, Dr. Leakey came to Kenya to work for Dr. Louis B. Leakey at his primate research center near Nairobi. At the same time, she collected data for her doctoral dissertation, which she completed in 1968. In the 1960s women were frequently denied places on expeditions; but in 1969 she was invited by Richard Leakey to join his field team at Koobi Fora on the eastern shore of Lake Turkana. She has worked in the Turkana area every year since then.

Dr. Leakey is a Research Associate in the Paleontology Division of the National Museum of Kenya. She was named a National Geographic “explorer-in-residence,” in honor of the 50 year relationship between “the National Geographic Society and the Leakey family dynasty of pioneering fossil hunters.”


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