Mary Leakey
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Mary Leakey (February 6, 1913 – December 9, 1996) was a British archaeologist, who, along with others, discovered the first skull of a fossil ape on Rusinga Island and also a noted robust Australopithecine called Zinjanthropus at Olduvai. For much of her career she worked with her husband Louis Leakey in Olduvai Gorge, uncovering the tools and fossils of ancient hominines. She developed a system for classifying the stone tools found at Olduvai. She also discovered the Laetoli footprints. In 1960 she became director of excavation at Olduvai and subsequently took it over, building her own staff. After the death of her husband she became a leading palaeoanthropologist in the Leakey tradition, helping to establish her son Richard in the field.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] The artist's daughter
Mary Leakey was born Mary Douglas Nicol on February 6, 1913 in London, England to Erskine Nicol and Cecilia Frere Nicol. Since Erskine worked as a painter, specializing in watercolor landscapes, the Nicol family would move from place to place, visiting numerous locations in France, Italy and Egypt, where Erskine painted scenes to be sold in England.
The Nicols spent much of their time in southern France. Mary became fluent in French. She identified more with the adventurous spirit of her father, going for long walks and explorations with him and having long talks. She disliked her governess and had less sympathy for her mother.
In 1925 when she was 12, the Nicols were staying Les Eyzies when Elie Peyrony was excavating one of the caves there. Peyrony did not understand the significance of much of what he found and was not digging scientifically at that early stage of archaeology. Mary received permission to go through his dump. It was here that her interest in prehistory was sparked. She started a collection of points, scrapers and blades from the dump and developed her first system of classification.[1]
That winter, the family moved to Cabrerets, a village of Dordogne, France. There she met Abbe Lemozi, the village priest, who befriended her and became for a time her mentor. The two discussed theology, toured Pêche Merle Cave to view the prehistoric paintings of bisons and horses, and apparently did some excavation, as she credits him with teaching her the art. She walked also with her father along the Sagne River.
[edit] Escape into prehistory
In the spring of 1926, in Mary's 13th year, her father died of cancer. The services were read by Lemozi. Erskine's brother Percy came to take them back to London. Cecilia sold Erskine's paintings and moved to a boardinghouse in Kensington. She placed Mary in a Catholic convent there to be educated, following the example of her own life. However, Mary's relationship to the nuns became confrontative. Later she boasted of never passing an examination there.[2] She was expelled temporarily for refusing to recite poetry and then permanently for causing an explosion in a chemistry laboratory.[1]
In the last months with her father she had developed a passion for prehistory, which she could not now forget. In 1930, at age 17, she attended lectures for archaeology and geology at University College London and the London Museum and applied to a number of excavations to be held in the summer. She found one at Hembury, a Neolithic site, under Dorothy Liddell, who coached her along for four years. Her illustrations of tools for Dorothy drew the attention of Gertrude Caton-Thompson. She entered the field as an illustrator for Caton-Thompson's book, The Desert Fayoum.
[edit] Matriarch
Through Gertrude Mary met Louis Leakey, who was in need of an illustrator for his book, Adam's Ancestors. While she was doing that work they became romantically attached. Louis was already married, but love in this case conquered all. They also shared common interests and values: a love of freedom and dislike for rules, an egalitarian frame of mind extending even to animals, a desire for adventure and a passion for archaeology. They moved in together causing a scandal that ruined Louis' career at Cambridge University and were married when Louis' wife Frida divorced him in 1936.
From then until about 1962 Louis and Mary remained soul-mates through the most trying physical hardships. Early in their career he nursed her through double pneumonia, staying up with her night after night. They had three sons: Jonathan in 1940, Richard in 1944, and Philip in 1949. The boys received much of their early childhood care at various anthropological sites. Whenever possible the Leakeys excavated and explored as a family. The boys grew up with the same love of freedom their parents had. Mary would not even allow guests to shoo away the pet hyraxes that helped themselves to food and drink at the dinner table. She smoked incessantly, first cigarettes and then cigars, and dressed as though on excavation.
Louis was not always faithful to Mary, as he had not been to Frida. In 1960 they agreed that Mary should become director of excavations at Olduvai. From then on she operated more or less independently, taking over the dig. After Vanne Goodall and Louis formed a romantic attachment in 1962 the intimate side of the marriage was effectively over. Louis went from Vanne to Dian Fossey, but the old charm was gone. He ended by earning the opprobrium of almost all the women in his life, including Mary. Vanne Goodall and Rosalie Osborn loved him to the end, but they were a sore topic to Mary. Her life consisted mainly of her children, her dogs and her archaeology. Louis died on October 1, 1972 of a heart attack, and Mary, already apart for some years, went on.
- For more details on this topic, see Louis Leakey.
[edit] Floruit
Mary carried on after Louis, becoming a powerful and respected figure. By then Richard had decided to become a palaeoanthropologist. She helped his career significantly. The other two boys had opted to follow other interests.
[edit] Passing
Mary died on December 9, 1996 at the age of 83, a renowned palaeoanthropologist, who had not only conducted significant research of her own, but had been invaluable to the research careers of her husband and their son Richard. There have been few who did not acclaim her as a remarkable woman.
[edit] Excavations
Mary served her apprenticeship in archaeology under Dorothy Liddell at Hembury in Devon, England, 1930-1934, for whom she also did illustrations.
The years 1935 to 1959, spent at Olduvai Gorge in the Serengeti plains of Northern Tanzania, yielded many stone tools from primitive stone-chopping instruments to multi-purpose hand axes. These finds came from Stone Age cultures dated as far back as 100,000 to two million years ago.
The Leakeys unearthed a Proconsul africanus skull on Rusinga Island, in October of 1947. This skull was the first skull of a fossil ape ever to be found and to this day only three of these apes are known.
Their next discovery, in 1959, was a 1.75 million-year-old Australopithecus boisei skull. They also found a less robust Homo habilis skull and bones of a hand. After reconstructing the hand, it was proven the hand was capable of precise manipulation. Many more remains were found at this site. In 1965 the husband and wife team uncovered a Homo erectus skull, dated at one million years old.
After Mary's husband passed on, she continued her work at Olduvai and Laetoli. It was here at the Laetoli site, that she discovered Homo fossils that were more than 3.75 million-years-old. She also discovered fifteen new species and one new genus.
From 1976 to 1981 Mary and her staff worked to uncover the Laetoli hominid footprint trail which was left in volcanic ashes some 3.6 million years ago. The years that followed this discovery were filled with research at Olduvai and Laetoli, the follow-up work to discoveries and preparing publications.
[edit] Books
- Excavations at Njoro River Cave, 1950, with Louis.
- Olduvai Gorge: Excavations in Beds I and II, 1960-1963, 1971.
- Olduvai Gorge: My Search for Early Man, 1979
- Africa's Vanishing Art: The Rock Paintings of Tanzania, 1983
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Virginia Morell, Ancestral Passions, Copyright 1996, Chapter 4, "Louis and Mary."
- ^ Mary Leakey, archaeologist and anthropologist, obituary from the London Times, December 10, 1996, displayed at the Primate Info Net, University of Wisconsin.
[edit] See also
- Leakey family
- List of fossil sites (with link directory)
- List of hominina (hominid) fossils (with images)