Leakey, Richard Erskine Frere

Leakey, Richard Erskine Frere

(frĭr), 1944–, Kenyan paleoanthropologist, conservationist, and government official. The son of Louis and Mary LeakeyLeakey, Louis Seymour Bazett
, 1903–72, British archaeologist and anthropologist of E Africa, b. Kabete, Kenya; father of Richard Leakey. His fossil discoveries in E Africa demonstrated that humans were far older than had previously been suspected.
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, he spent much of his early life at archaeological sites in E Africa. His own career began in 1968 when, as a paleoanthropologist without formal academic training, he received funding from the National Geographic Society to conduct research on human evolution at Lake Turkana (1969–75), where a Homo habilis dating from 1.9 million years ago was discovered (1972). With Roger Lewin, Leakey has written Origins (1977), The Making of Mankind (1981), and Origins Reconsidered (1992).

In addition to conducting archaeological investigations, Leakey headed the National Museums of Kenya (1974–89) and the Department of Archaeological Sites. An outspoken advocate of wildlife conservation, he helped to promote a worldwide ban on the ivory trade and in 1989 became the director of the Kenya Wildlife Service, He overhauled the agency, but in 1994 he broke with Kenyan president Daniel arap MoiMoi, Daniel Toroitich arap
, 1924–, president of Kenya (1978–2002). First named to the legislature in 1955, he opposed Kikuyu and Luo dominance until he joined Kenya's first independent government (1963) and the majority party, the Kenya African National Union (KANU).
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 and resigned.

In 1995 he joined other opponents of Moi's government in forming the prodemocracy, anticorruption Safina [Ark] party, and he was elected to parliament (1997) as a member of the opposition. He was reconciled with Moi in 1998 and again became head of the wildlife service. In 1999 he was named head of the Kenyan civil service, but he resigned in 2001. He has since co-founded WildlifeDirect.org, an online network launched in 2006 that enables African conservationists and wildlife parks and reserves to reach donors and other supporters worldwide.

Leakey's second wife, Meave G. Leakey, a paleontologist, discovered (1996) the remains of the 4-million-year-old Australopithecus anamensis. In 2001 a team she headed argued that a 3.5-million-year-old skull unearthed in Kenya represented a hominin genus and species, Kenyanthropus platyops, distinct from the contemporary Australopithecus afarensis.

Bibliography

See his autobiography (1984).