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Mary Leakey

Mary Douglas Leakey, FBA (née Nicol, 6 February 1913 – 9 December 1996) was a British paleoanthropologist who discovered the first fossilised Proconsul skull, an extinct ape which is now believed to be ancestral to humans. She also discovered the robust Zinjanthropus skull at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, eastern Africa. For much of her career she worked with her husband, Louis Leakey, at Olduvai Gorge, where they uncovered fossils of ancient hominines and the earliest hominins, as well as the stone tools produced by the latter group. Mary Leakey developed a system for classifying the stone tools found at Olduvai. She discovered the Laetoli footprints, and at the Laetoli site she discovered hominin fossils that were more than 3.75 million years old.

Mary Leakey
Leakey in 1977
Born
Mary Douglas Nicol

(1913-02-06)6 February 1913
London, England
Died9 December 1996(1996-12-09) (aged 83)
Nairobi, Kenya
NationalityBritish
Alma materBritain and Kenya
Known forZinjanthropus fossil; Laetoli footprints
Spouse
(m. 1936; died 1972)
Children
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPaleoanthropology
InstitutionsCentral Kenya

During her career, Leakey discovered fifteen new species of animal. She also brought about the naming of a new genus.

In 1972, after the death of her husband, Leakey became director of excavations at Olduvai. She maintained the Leakey family tradition of palaeoanthropology by training her son, Richard, in the field.

Biography edit

Childhood edit

Mary Leakey was born on 6 February 1913, in London, England to Erskine Edward Nicol and Cecilia Marion (Frere) Nicol. The Nicol family moved to numerous locations in thе United States, Italy, and Egypt where Erskine painted watercolours that he brought back and sold in England. Mary began to develop an enthusiasm for Egyptology during these travel.[citation needed]

On her mother's side, Mary was a 3rd great-granddaughter of antiquarian John Frere and shared this same ancestry with historian and archaeologist Sheppard Frere. The Frere family had been active abolitionists in the British colonial empire during the 19th century and established several communities for freed slaves. Three of these communities were still in existence when Leakey published her 1984 autobiography: Freretown, Kenya; Freretown, South Africa; and Freretown, India.[citation needed]

The Nicols spent much of their time in southern France where young Mary became fluent in French. In 1925, when Mary was 12, the Nicols stayed at the commune, Les Eyzies, at a time when Elie Peyrony, a French archaeologist and prehistorian, was excavating one of the caves there. Peyrony was not excavating scientifically during that early stage of archaeology and did not understand the significance of much of what he found. Mary received permission to go through the remnants of his dig and this was where her interests in prehistory and archaeology were sparked. She started a collection of points, scrapers, and blades from the dump and developed her first system of classification.[1]

The family then moved to Cabrerets, a village of Lot, France. There she met Abbé Lemozi, the village priest, who befriended her and became her mentor for a time. The two toured Pech Merle cave to view the prehistoric paintings of bison and horses.[2]

Education edit

In the spring of 1926, when Mary was thirteen years old, her father died of cancer and Mary and her mother returned to London. Mary was placed in a local Catholic convent to be educated, and she later boasted of never passing an examination there.[3] Although she spoke fluent French, Mary did not excel at French language studies, apparently because her teacher frowned upon her provincial accent. She was expelled for refusing to recite poetry, and was later expelled from a second convent school for causing an explosion in a chemistry laboratory.[4] After the second expulsion, her mother hired two tutors, who were no more successful than the nuns. After the unsuccessful tutors, her mother hired a nanny.

Mary's particular interests centered on illustration and archaeology, but formal university admission was impossible with her academic record. Her mother contacted a professor at Oxford University about possible admission, and was encouraged not to apply, as it would be a waste of her time. Mary had no further contact with the university until it awarded her an honorary doctoral degree in 1951.[citation needed]

The small family moved to Kensington, in West London, where, though unregistered, Mary attended lectures in archaeology and related subjects at University College and at the London Museum, where she studied under Mortimer Wheeler.[5]

Mary applied to work on a number of summer excavations. Wheeler was the first to accept her for a dig. It took place at St. Albans at the Roman site of Verulamium. Her next dig was at Hembury, a Neolithic site, under Dorothy Liddell, who trained her for four years until 1934. Her illustrations of tools for Liddell drew the attention of Gertrude Caton Thompson, and, in late 1932, she entered the field as an illustrator for Caton Thompson's book The Desert Fayoum.[6]

Life edit

 
Mary and Louis Leakey at Olduvai Gorge

Through Caton Thompson, an English archaeologist, Mary met Louis Leakey, who was in need of an illustrator for his book Adam's Ancestors (1934). While she was doing that work they became romantically involved. Leakey was still married and his son Collin had just been born when they moved in with each other. They married after Frida Leakey divorced him in 1936.[7] This ruined his career at Cambridge University.[citation needed]

Mary and Louis Leakey had three sons: Jonathan, born in 1940, Richard in 1944, and Philip in 1949. Their fourth child, a daughter, died as a baby.[7] The three boys received much of their early childhood care at various anthropological sites and, whenever possible, the Leakeys excavated and explored as a family. The children accompanied them to various work sites, with dig becoming a family endeavour.[8] The boys grew up with the same love of freedom that their parents had become accustomed to. Mary would not even allow guests to shoo away the pet hyraxes that helped themselves to food and drink at the dinner table. In her autobiography, she rarely mentioned her pregnancies or the difficulties she faced while raising children in Kenya. She smoked a lot, first cigarettes and then cigars, and usually dressed as though completing an excavation.[citation needed]

While her husband was alive, they published many joint findings. However, her contributions were often credited to her husband.[9] Louis Leakey died on 1 October 1972 of a heart attack. Mary Leakey continued with the family's archaeological work, becoming a respected figure in paleoanthropology in her own right. Her son, Richard Leakey, also decided to become a paleoanthropologist, and Mary helped him begin his career. Her other two sons, Jonathan and Philip Leakey, pursued other interests.[citation needed]

Death edit

Mary Leakey died on 9 December 1996, in Nairobi, Kenya, at the age of 83. Her family, who announced her death, did not give the cause, saying only that she died peacefully.[10]

Research edit

 
Replica of the skull "Zinjanthropus", sometimes known as "Nutcracker Man", found by Mary Leakey.
 
Plinth with plaque sited in Olduvai Gorge marking the spot where Mary Leakey discovered "Zinjanthropus", the first-found A. boisei in Africa.

Mary Leakey served her apprenticeship under Dorothy Liddell at Hembury, 1930–34 (see above). In 1934, she took part in a dig at Swanscombe where she discovered the largest elephant tooth known to Britain at that time.[11]

Throughout the 1930s to 1950s, Mary and Louis Leakey worked at Later Stone Age, Neolithic, and Iron Age archaeological sites in central Kenya, such as Hyrax Hill and Njoro River Cave. In October 1948, Mary discovered a Proconsul africanus skull on Rusinga Island.[12][13] Mary Leakey also recorded and published the Kondoa Irangi Rock Paintings in central Tanzania.

The Leakeys' most famous research, however, was at Olduvai Gorge in the Serengeti plains of northern Tanzania. The site yielded many stone tools, from Oldowan choppers to multi-purpose hand axes. The earliest tools they dug up were likely made by Homo habilis and can be dated to over two million years ago.[citation needed]

On the morning of 17 July 1959, Louis felt ill at Olduvai and stayed at camp while Mary went out to the field. At some point she noticed a piece of bone that "seemed to be part of a skull" with a "hominid" look".[14] After dusting the topsoil away, she found "two large teeth set in the curve of a jaw", and she drove back to camp exclaiming "I've got him!"[15] Active excavation began the following day and a partial cranium was unearthed within a few weeks, though it had to be reconstructed from fragments scattered in the scree.[16] After examining the cranium, Louis Leakey concluded it was of a species ancestral to humans, the australopithecines.[17] He eventually dubbed the find Zinjanthropus boisei, "East Africa man"—Zinj is an ancient Arabic word for the East African coast. The name was later revised to Paranthropus boisei, and by some to Australopithecus boisei; a consensus on its classification is still in debate.

In the 1960s the Leakeys started to work with the young Kamoya Kimeu with Mary particularly valuing his expertise. The family trained him in paleontology, evolutionary theory and excavating techniques, which he then trained the next generations of Kenyan fossil finders in, as he became a highly respected Kenyan paleontologist and curator.[18]

After her husband died in 1972, Mary Leakey continued their work at Olduvai and Laetoli. It was at the Laetoli site that she discovered hominin fossils that were more than 3.75 million years old.[citation needed]

From 1976 to 1981, Leakey and her staff uncovered the Laetoli hominin footprint trail which had been tracked through a layer of volcanic ash some 3.6 million years ago. The subsequent years were filled with research at Olduvai and Laetoli, follow-up work to discoveries, and preparing publications.[citation needed]

Throughout her career, Leakey discovered 15 new species of animals, and one new genus. She was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1979.[19]

Legacy edit

In April 2013, Leakey was honoured by Royal Mail in the UK, as one of six people selected as subjects for the "Great Britons" commemorative postage stamp issue.[20] Google celebrated the 100th anniversary of Mary Leakey's birth with its Google doodle for 6 February 2013.[21]

The Mary Leakey Girls' High School, a secondary school for girls near Kikuyu Town, was named after Mary's mother-in-law, Mary Bazett Leakey, mother of her husband, Louis Leakey.[22]

In the video game Civilization VI, Leakey is a Great Scientist that players can recruit. Her unique ability grants extra science and tourism to artifacts.[23]

Awards and honours edit

Books authored edit

  • Excavations at Njoro River Cave (with Louis Leakey), 1950
  • 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
  • Disclosing the Past, 1984

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Morell, Virginia, Ancestral Passions, 1995, Chapter 4, "Louis and Mary."
  2. ^ Disclosing the Past (1984), pp. 27–28.
  3. ^ "Mary Leakey, Archaeologist and Anthropologist"; obituary; The Times, 10 December 1996; displayed at the Primate Info Net; University of Wisconsin.
  4. ^ Disclosing the Past, p. 33.
  5. ^ Disclosing the Past, pp. 34–26, 36–37.
  6. ^ Disclosing the Past, pp. 37–39.
  7. ^ a b "Leakey [née Nicol], Mary Douglas (1913–1996), archaeologist and palaeoanthropologist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/56023. Retrieved 23 September 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ Hager, Lori (1997). Women in Human Evolution. Psychology Press. p. 17.
  9. ^ Hager, Lori (1997). Women in Human Evolution. Psychology Press. p. 18.
  10. ^ John Noble Wilford; "Mary Leakey, 83, Dies; Traced Human Dawn", New York Times, 10 December 1996; retrieved March 2014.
  11. ^ Disclosing the Past, pp. 47–48.
  12. ^ Leakey, M.D. 1948. "The discovery of the skull and associated mandible of a Miocene ape." The Archaeological News Letter 8, December 1948, p.3.
  13. ^ Cornwall, I.W. 1948. "The skull of Proconsul africanus". The Archaeological News Letter 8, December 1948, p.3–4.
  14. ^ Mary Leakey, My Search, 75.
  15. ^ Morell, 181.
  16. ^ Cela-Conde & Ayala, 158; Morell, 183–184.
  17. ^ Cela-Conde & Ayala, 158; Johanson, Edgar & Brill, 156
  18. ^ Risen, Clay (11 August 2022). "Kamoya Kimeu, Fossil-Hunting 'Legend' in East Africa, Is Dead". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  19. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter L" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  20. ^ . royalmailgroup.com. 17 April 2013. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  21. ^ "Mary Leakey's 100th Birthday", Google; accessed 6 February 2013.
  22. ^ Kenyaonline (7 January 2020). "Mary Leakey Girls High School; All details, KCSE Results Analysis and Admission Process". 2022/2023. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  23. ^ Scientists – Civilization 6 Wiki Guide – IGN, retrieved 20 June 2021
  24. ^ "SWG Gold Medalists". Society of Woman Geographers. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  25. ^ "Mary Leakey". Retrieved 25 May 2016.

Further reading edit

External links edit


mary, leakey, mary, douglas, leakey, née, nicol, february, 1913, december, 1996, british, paleoanthropologist, discovered, first, fossilised, proconsul, skull, extinct, which, believed, ancestral, humans, also, discovered, robust, zinjanthropus, skull, olduvai. Mary Douglas Leakey FBA nee Nicol 6 February 1913 9 December 1996 was a British paleoanthropologist who discovered the first fossilised Proconsul skull an extinct ape which is now believed to be ancestral to humans She also discovered the robust Zinjanthropus skull at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania eastern Africa For much of her career she worked with her husband Louis Leakey at Olduvai Gorge where they uncovered fossils of ancient hominines and the earliest hominins as well as the stone tools produced by the latter group Mary Leakey developed a system for classifying the stone tools found at Olduvai She discovered the Laetoli footprints and at the Laetoli site she discovered hominin fossils that were more than 3 75 million years old Mary LeakeyLeakey in 1977BornMary Douglas Nicol 1913 02 06 6 February 1913London EnglandDied9 December 1996 1996 12 09 aged 83 Nairobi KenyaNationalityBritishAlma materBritain and KenyaKnown forZinjanthropus fossil Laetoli footprintsSpouseLouis Leakey m 1936 died 1972 wbr ChildrenJonathan LeakeyRichard LeakeyPhilip LeakeyAwardsHubbard Medal 1962 Prestwich Medal 1969 Scientific careerFieldsPaleoanthropologyInstitutionsCentral KenyaDuring her career Leakey discovered fifteen new species of animal She also brought about the naming of a new genus In 1972 after the death of her husband Leakey became director of excavations at Olduvai She maintained the Leakey family tradition of palaeoanthropology by training her son Richard in the field Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Education 1 3 Life 1 4 Death 2 Research 3 Legacy 4 Awards and honours 5 Books authored 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography editChildhood edit Mary Leakey was born on 6 February 1913 in London England to Erskine Edward Nicol and Cecilia Marion Frere Nicol The Nicol family moved to numerous locations in the United States Italy and Egypt where Erskine painted watercolours that he brought back and sold in England Mary began to develop an enthusiasm for Egyptology during these travel citation needed On her mother s side Mary was a 3rd great granddaughter of antiquarian John Frere and shared this same ancestry with historian and archaeologist Sheppard Frere The Frere family had been active abolitionists in the British colonial empire during the 19th century and established several communities for freed slaves Three of these communities were still in existence when Leakey published her 1984 autobiography Freretown Kenya Freretown South Africa and Freretown India citation needed The Nicols spent much of their time in southern France where young Mary became fluent in French In 1925 when Mary was 12 the Nicols stayed at the commune Les Eyzies at a time when Elie Peyrony a French archaeologist and prehistorian was excavating one of the caves there Peyrony was not excavating scientifically during that early stage of archaeology and did not understand the significance of much of what he found Mary received permission to go through the remnants of his dig and this was where her interests in prehistory and archaeology were sparked She started a collection of points scrapers and blades from the dump and developed her first system of classification 1 The family then moved to Cabrerets a village of Lot France There she met Abbe Lemozi the village priest who befriended her and became her mentor for a time The two toured Pech Merle cave to view the prehistoric paintings of bison and horses 2 Education edit In the spring of 1926 when Mary was thirteen years old her father died of cancer and Mary and her mother returned to London Mary was placed in a local Catholic convent to be educated and she later boasted of never passing an examination there 3 Although she spoke fluent French Mary did not excel at French language studies apparently because her teacher frowned upon her provincial accent She was expelled for refusing to recite poetry and was later expelled from a second convent school for causing an explosion in a chemistry laboratory 4 After the second expulsion her mother hired two tutors who were no more successful than the nuns After the unsuccessful tutors her mother hired a nanny Mary s particular interests centered on illustration and archaeology but formal university admission was impossible with her academic record Her mother contacted a professor at Oxford University about possible admission and was encouraged not to apply as it would be a waste of her time Mary had no further contact with the university until it awarded her an honorary doctoral degree in 1951 citation needed The small family moved to Kensington in West London where though unregistered Mary attended lectures in archaeology and related subjects at University College and at the London Museum where she studied under Mortimer Wheeler 5 Mary applied to work on a number of summer excavations Wheeler was the first to accept her for a dig It took place at St Albans at the Roman site of Verulamium Her next dig was at Hembury a Neolithic site under Dorothy Liddell who trained her for four years until 1934 Her illustrations of tools for Liddell drew the attention of Gertrude Caton Thompson and in late 1932 she entered the field as an illustrator for Caton Thompson s book The Desert Fayoum 6 Life edit nbsp Mary and Louis Leakey at Olduvai GorgeThrough Caton Thompson an English archaeologist Mary met Louis Leakey who was in need of an illustrator for his book Adam s Ancestors 1934 While she was doing that work they became romantically involved Leakey was still married and his son Collin had just been born when they moved in with each other They married after Frida Leakey divorced him in 1936 7 This ruined his career at Cambridge University citation needed Mary and Louis Leakey had three sons Jonathan born in 1940 Richard in 1944 and Philip in 1949 Their fourth child a daughter died as a baby 7 The three boys received much of their early childhood care at various anthropological sites and whenever possible the Leakeys excavated and explored as a family The children accompanied them to various work sites with dig becoming a family endeavour 8 The boys grew up with the same love of freedom that their parents had become accustomed to Mary would not even allow guests to shoo away the pet hyraxes that helped themselves to food and drink at the dinner table In her autobiography she rarely mentioned her pregnancies or the difficulties she faced while raising children in Kenya She smoked a lot first cigarettes and then cigars and usually dressed as though completing an excavation citation needed While her husband was alive they published many joint findings However her contributions were often credited to her husband 9 Louis Leakey died on 1 October 1972 of a heart attack Mary Leakey continued with the family s archaeological work becoming a respected figure in paleoanthropology in her own right Her son Richard Leakey also decided to become a paleoanthropologist and Mary helped him begin his career Her other two sons Jonathan and Philip Leakey pursued other interests citation needed Death edit Mary Leakey died on 9 December 1996 in Nairobi Kenya at the age of 83 Her family who announced her death did not give the cause saying only that she died peacefully 10 Research edit nbsp Replica of the skull Zinjanthropus sometimes known as Nutcracker Man found by Mary Leakey nbsp Plinth with plaque sited in Olduvai Gorge marking the spot where Mary Leakey discovered Zinjanthropus the first found A boisei in Africa Mary Leakey served her apprenticeship under Dorothy Liddell at Hembury 1930 34 see above In 1934 she took part in a dig at Swanscombe where she discovered the largest elephant tooth known to Britain at that time 11 Throughout the 1930s to 1950s Mary and Louis Leakey worked at Later Stone Age Neolithic and Iron Age archaeological sites in central Kenya such as Hyrax Hill and Njoro River Cave In October 1948 Mary discovered a Proconsul africanus skull on Rusinga Island 12 13 Mary Leakey also recorded and published the Kondoa Irangi Rock Paintings in central Tanzania The Leakeys most famous research however was at Olduvai Gorge in the Serengeti plains of northern Tanzania The site yielded many stone tools from Oldowan choppers to multi purpose hand axes The earliest tools they dug up were likely made by Homo habilis and can be dated to over two million years ago citation needed On the morning of 17 July 1959 Louis felt ill at Olduvai and stayed at camp while Mary went out to the field At some point she noticed a piece of bone that seemed to be part of a skull with a hominid look 14 After dusting the topsoil away she found two large teeth set in the curve of a jaw and she drove back to camp exclaiming I ve got him 15 Active excavation began the following day and a partial cranium was unearthed within a few weeks though it had to be reconstructed from fragments scattered in the scree 16 After examining the cranium Louis Leakey concluded it was of a species ancestral to humans the australopithecines 17 He eventually dubbed the find Zinjanthropus boisei East Africa man Zinj is an ancient Arabic word for the East African coast The name was later revised to Paranthropus boisei and by some to Australopithecus boisei a consensus on its classification is still in debate In the 1960s the Leakeys started to work with the young Kamoya Kimeu with Mary particularly valuing his expertise The family trained him in paleontology evolutionary theory and excavating techniques which he then trained the next generations of Kenyan fossil finders in as he became a highly respected Kenyan paleontologist and curator 18 After her husband died in 1972 Mary Leakey continued their work at Olduvai and Laetoli It was at the Laetoli site that she discovered hominin fossils that were more than 3 75 million years old citation needed From 1976 to 1981 Leakey and her staff uncovered the Laetoli hominin footprint trail which had been tracked through a layer of volcanic ash some 3 6 million years ago The subsequent years were filled with research at Olduvai and Laetoli follow up work to discoveries and preparing publications citation needed Throughout her career Leakey discovered 15 new species of animals and one new genus She was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1979 19 Legacy editIn April 2013 Leakey was honoured by Royal Mail in the UK as one of six people selected as subjects for the Great Britons commemorative postage stamp issue 20 Google celebrated the 100th anniversary of Mary Leakey s birth with its Google doodle for 6 February 2013 21 The Mary Leakey Girls High School a secondary school for girls near Kikuyu Town was named after Mary s mother in law Mary Bazett Leakey mother of her husband Louis Leakey 22 In the video game Civilization VI Leakey is a Great Scientist that players can recruit Her unique ability grants extra science and tourism to artifacts 23 Awards and honours editHonorary D Sc University of the Witwatersrand 1968 Honorary DSSc Yale 1976 Honorary D Sc University of Michigan 1980 Honorary D Litt Oxford 1981 Gold Medal of Society of Woman Geographers 1975 24 Linnaeus Gold Medal of the Royal Swedish Academy 1978 The Elizabeth Blackwell Award 1980 The Hubbard Medal of National Geographic Society 1962 jointly with Louis Leakey The Prestwich Medal Geological Society of London 1969 jointly with Louis Leakey 25 unreliable source Books authored editExcavations at Njoro River Cave with Louis Leakey 1950 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 Disclosing the Past 1984See also editList of fossil sites List of human evolution fossils with images Notes edit Morell Virginia Ancestral Passions 1995 Chapter 4 Louis and Mary Disclosing the Past 1984 pp 27 28 Mary Leakey Archaeologist and Anthropologist obituary The Times 10 December 1996 displayed at the Primate Info Net University of Wisconsin Disclosing the Past p 33 Disclosing the Past pp 34 26 36 37 Disclosing the Past pp 37 39 a b Leakey nee Nicol Mary Douglas 1913 1996 archaeologist and palaeoanthropologist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 56023 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hager Lori 1997 Women in Human Evolution Psychology Press p 17 Hager Lori 1997 Women in Human Evolution Psychology Press p 18 John Noble Wilford Mary Leakey 83 Dies Traced Human Dawn New York Times 10 December 1996 retrieved March 2014 Disclosing the Past pp 47 48 Leakey M D 1948 The discovery of the skull and associated mandible of a Miocene ape The Archaeological News Letter 8 December 1948 p 3 Cornwall I W 1948 The skull of Proconsul africanus The Archaeological News Letter 8 December 1948 p 3 4 Mary Leakey My Search 75 Morell 181 Cela Conde amp Ayala 158 Morell 183 184 Cela Conde amp Ayala 158 Johanson Edgar amp Brill 156 Risen Clay 11 August 2022 Kamoya Kimeu Fossil Hunting Legend in East Africa Is Dead The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 13 August 2022 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter L PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 25 July 2014 Royal Mail celebrates Great Britons with launch of latest special stamp collection royalmailgroup com 17 April 2013 Archived from the original on 2 April 2016 Retrieved 27 April 2013 Mary Leakey s 100th Birthday Google accessed 6 February 2013 Kenyaonline 7 January 2020 Mary Leakey Girls High School All details KCSE Results Analysis and Admission Process 2022 2023 Retrieved 22 November 2022 Scientists Civilization 6 Wiki Guide IGN retrieved 20 June 2021 SWG Gold Medalists Society of Woman Geographers Retrieved 3 February 2020 Mary Leakey Retrieved 25 May 2016 Further reading editMowbray Ken 1970 1980 Leakey Mary Douglas Nicol Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 22 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 221 224 ISBN 978 0 684 10114 9 External links editLeakey Foundation website Works by or about Mary Leakey at Internet Archive vteLeakey family treeJames Leakey 1775 1865 i Eliza Hubbard Woolmer 1793 1855 ii James Shirley Leakey 1824 1871 citation needed Caroline Woolmer Leakey 1827 1881 ii 9 others ii Rev Arundell Leakey 1853 1924 Rev Harry Leakey 1868 1940 Elizabeth Laing 1873 1925 iii iv Arundell Gray Arundell Leakey 1885 1954 iii iv 5 othersHenrietta Wilfrida Avern 1902 1993 Louis Seymour Bazett Leakey iv 1903 1972 Mary Douglas Nicol 1913 1996 3 othersNigel Gray Leakey 1913 1941 iii iv Robert Dove Leakey 1914 2013 Maj Gen Arundell Rea Leakey 1915 1999 Agnes Florence Leakey 1917 2006 iv Colin Louis Avern Leakey 1933 2018 Meave Epps b 1942 Richard Erskine Frere Leakey 1944 2022 Margaret CropperJonathan Harry Erskine Leakey 1940 2021 Philip Leakey b 1949 Lt Gen Arundell David Leakey b 1952 Louise Leakey b 1972 Emmanuel Prince de Merode b 1970 Notes O Donoghue F M Remington V revised 2004 Leakey James 1775 1865 miniature painter Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 16244 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Eliza Hubbard Woolmer wife of James Leakey Artsandculture google com Archived from the original on 6 April 2022 Retrieved 6 April 2022 Elizabeth Hubbard Woolmer was born on 20 December 1793 On 28 August 1815 she married the artist James Leakey 1775 1865 at St Sidwell s Church Exeter 2 They had eleven children Caroline Woolmer Leakey 1827 1881 a b c Serjeant Nigel Gray Leakey War Casualty Details cwgc org Commonwealth War Graves Commission Archived from the original on 8 April 2022 Retrieved 8 April 2022 NIGEL GRAY LEAKEY Died 19 May 1941 Age 28 years old Son of Arundell Gray A and Elizabeth Leakey of Kiganjo Kenya a b c d e Lean Mary 26 January 2007 Agnes Hofmeyr Worker for reconciliation in Africa The Independent Archived from the original on 22 September 2012 Retrieved 8 April 2022 Agnes Leakey worker for reconciliation born Limuru Kenya 8 May 1917 married 1946 Bremer Hofmeyr died 1993 one son and one son deceased died Johannesburg 1 December 2006 Agnes Leakey was born in Limuru Kenya in 1917 the youngest child of Gray Leakey cousin of the anthropologist Louis Leakey and his first wife Elizabeth in 1926 when Elizabeth died She married a South African colleague Bremer Hofmeyr in 1946 in 1954 Mau Mau fighters attacked her father s farm killed her stepmother and abducted her father he was buried alive in a shallow grave on Mount Kenya she lost her eldest brother Nigel Leakey in 1941 at Colito where he won the Victoria Cross Three years after Bremer s death in 1993 their elder son Murray was killed in a car accident in Johannesburg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Leakey amp oldid 1186030783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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