Dr. Louise N. Leakey
Fourth-generation Kenyan Louise N. Leakey,
Ph.D. has upheld the Leakey family legacy in the search for human
origins
through continuing research with the Koobi Fora Research Project in the
Turkana Basin of northern Kenya. Daughter of renowned
paleoanthropologists Meave and Richard Leakey, Louise is now a National
Geographic “Explorer-in-residence”.
She leads the
exploration and
excavation project at Lake Turkana, made famous through the work of her
parents for its many contributions to the human fossil record. For 35
years, the rigorous process of search, excavation, and paleoecological
and geological analysis in the Turkana Basin has made it one of the most
comprehensive field efforts yet organized to explore human origins and
evolution.
One of the research team’s most recent and publicized discoveries
was that of a new species, Kenyanthropus platyops, which extends
diversity in the human fossil record back to 3.5 million years. This
find, announced in the journal Nature, has profound implications for our
understanding of human origins. In a front page article, The New York
Times reported that “this discovery threatens to overturn the prevailing
view that a single line of descent stretched through the early stages of
human ancestry.” Joined by a team of Kenyan fossil hunters, the research
team also is rigorously searching the rocky terrain for remains of
animals that lived 1–4 million years ago in an effort to reconstruct the
habitat in which our species evolved.
In addition to the long term field studies in the Turkana Basin, Louise
has worked closely
with the local communities to increase funding for local schools and
medical centers. She has also spent considerable time working
alongside the Sibiloi National Park authorities to ensure the protection
of some of the richest fossil sites within the Park boundaries. Piloting
a light aircraft, a Cessna 206, across remote terrain, she conducts
aerial surveys, spotting wildlife and illegal livestock incursions into
the Park, as well as ferrying scientists and supplies to their remote
field stations at Lake Turkana.
She also works
alongside wildlife
authorities to preserve the unique plants and animals of Kenya’s
remotest
National Park and World Heritage Site. She is involved in several
community projects at Illeret, a town close to the Ethiopian border, in
an effort to improve the welfare of people on the National Park
boundaries. Louise was recently named a Young Global Leader for the
World Economic Forum, in recognition of the importance of both her
scientific contributions and community efforts.
Louise lives in Kenya with her husband, Emmanuel de Merode, and
their two young daughters. An avid photographer and a conservationist,
she sits on the advisory board of Sea Shepherd International, whose
efforts in the Galapagos have given the islands world attention. Among
her other pursuits, she manages the Leakey family vineyard where, on the
edge of the Great Rift Valley, they produce one of East Africa’s finest
Pinot Noirs.
Louise coauthored
New hominin genus from eastern Africa
shows diverse middle Pliocene lineages and
Implications of new early Homo fossils from Ileret,
east of Lake Turkana, Kenya.
She earned her IB from United World College of the Atlantic in 1990,
and a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology and Geology from the
University of Bristol in 1995. She earned her Ph.D. degree
in Paleontology and Biology
from the
University of London in 2001.
Watch her TEDTalk
Louise Leakey: Digging for humanity’s origins.
Watch
Louise Leakey: Stony Brook Masters Series,
Provost Lecture: Louise Leakey – A Search for Human Origins at Lake
Turkana in Northern Kenya, and
The Archaeology Channel – Exploring Human Origins:
An interview with Louise Leakey.
Read her
LinkedIn profile. Visit her
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