Dan Buettner | |
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Buettner in October 2010 |
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Born | 1960 St. Paul, Minnesota |
Occupation | explorer, educator |
Dan Buettner (born 1960 in St. Paul, Minnesota) is an American explorer, educator, author, public speaker and co-producer of an Emmy Award-winning documentary who also holds three world records for endurance bicycling.[1][2][3] He is the founder of the online Quest Network, Inc., which provides opportunities for students to interactively engage with explorers on expedition.[3] In February 2007, an expedition led by Buettner to Nicoya, Costa Rica uncovered the longest-lived people known in the Western Hemisphere.[4][5]
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Raised by an adventurous father, Buettner's appreciation of travel was encouraged by a series of international trips he won as a teenager selling newspapers.[1] His brothers Steve and Nick also followed in their father's footsteps.
After graduating from the College of St. Thomas in 1984, Buettner took a year to explore Spain before taking a job with National Public Radio in Washington, D.C. recruiting celebrity participation in a fund-raising croquet tournament with journalist George Plimpton.[1]
The experience taught him a lot about the fundraising value of publicity, so he set off to achieve several world records, cycling thousands of miles on several continents.[1] The first trip, called "Americastrek", covered 15,500 miles from Alaska to Argentina and was completed in 1987; the second, "Sovietrek", in 1990 covered 12,888 miles; the third, inspired by 1992's Los Angeles riots, was "Africatrek", covering 11,885 miles through Africa.[6] Buettner has completed these treks in spite of suffering from Ménière's disease.
In February 1995, he and a team including Mayanist Julie Acuff, photographer Douglas Mason, and his two brothers, Steve and Nick, embarked on a three-month, 3,244-mile mountain bicycling expedition known as MayaQuest. They travelled through Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, Belize, Guatemala, and Honduras to gain insights into the causes of the collapse of the Maya civilization around A.D. 900. Carrying laptop computers and a minisatellite dish on loan from Rockwell, these adventurers were able to link up with 40,000 schools involved in the project via Prodigy, as well as other Internet users. The team logged on twice a week, uploaded their findings, fielded questions from students and teachers, and received input from more than one million online participants.
Buettner first utilized the internet in publicizing his adventures on the last of these trips, as he and his companions posted on Mosaic the details.[7] The last of these trips also became the subject of an Emmy-winning PBS documentary co-produced by Buettner and a book he authored, Afratrek: A Journey by Bicycle through Africa, which won the Young Reader Award of Scientific American.[6]
In 1993, Buettner first began transmitting videos and stories from his expeditions into classrooms and in 1995 founded "Earthtreks, Inc." to support that effort.[6] He sold the company to textbook publisher Classroom Connect in 1997, but continued to lead expeditions until 2004.
His Africatrek and MayaQuest were adapted into educational computer games by MECC in the late 90s.
During his bicycling trips, Buettner became interested in demographics and longevity and began his research into "blue zones",[8] his term for the regions on Earth with the longest life expectancy, disability-free life expectancy or concentration of persons over 100,[1] He began investigating these "blue zones" with physicians and demographers, focusing his initial efforts in Sardinia, Italy; Okinawa, Japan;, Monterrey, Nuevo Leon and Loma Linda, California.[8]
Buettner reported his interest in "blue zones" in his cover story for National Geographic Magazine's November 2005 edition, "Secrets of Longevity".[1][9] When Costa Rican demographer Dr. Luis Rosero-Bixby revealed in 2005 that Costa Ricans who survive to the age of 60 "have the longest life expectancy of anyone in the world", National Geographic funded an expedition led by Buettner to investigate.[5] Buettner's expedition confirmed Rosero-Bixby's findings and discovered further that in the specific region of Nicoya, in the northwestern part of Costa Rica, residents were longer-lived even than other Costa Ricans, making it the "blue zone" of the Americas.[5]
In April 2008, Buettner released a book on his findings, The Blue Zone: Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who've Lived the Longest, through National Geographic Books.
Following his association with Earthtreks, Buettner founded a new company, Quest Network, Inc., to carry on his educational goals, beginning with his 2005 "blue zone" exploration of Okinawa, Japan.[7] His next Quest Network project covered his return visit to Nicoya in early 2007.[10] Quest Network's interactive classroom experiences allow students worldwide to vote on upcoming activities of the expedition team.[1]