Kenyan archaeologist and anthropologist
whose fossil discoveries in East Africa proved that human beings were far older
than had previously been believed and that human evolution was centered in
Africa, rather than in Asia, as earlier discoveries had suggested. Leakey was
also noted for his controversial interpretations of these archaeological finds.
Born of British missionary parents, Leakey spent his youth
with the Kikuyu people of Kenya, about whom he later wrote. He was educated at
the University of Cambridge and began his archaeological research in East
Africa in 1924; he was later aided by his second wife, the archaeologist Mary
Douglas Leakey (née Nicol), and their sons. He held various appointments at
major British and American universities and was curator of the Coryndon
Memorial Museum in Nairobi from 1945 to 1961.