In 1959, Mary Leakey discovered the fossilized cranium of an
extinct hominid, Zinjanthropus, in Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania.
The discovery of a human ancestor of unprecedented antiquity focused the
anthropological community’s attention on Africa as the cradle of mankind and
brought the Leakey family international renown. But at 16, Richard Leakey wanted
no part of squatting under the African sun, scratching the dirt for fossils. He
dropped out of school and struck out on his own. He trapped animals and
collected skeletons for research institutions, learned to fly, and started a
business taking tourists on photographic safaris.
While still in his teens, he joined a former colleague of his
parents on a fossil-hunting expedition to Lake Natron on the Kenya-Tanzania
border. To his surprise, he enjoyed the venture, but lacking academic
credentials, he received little credit for the team’s discoveries, so in 1965
he traveled to England to catch up on his schoolwork, with the intention of resuming
his education. When this proved more difficult than expected, he returned to
Kenya, where he managed paleontological expeditions and worked for the National
Museum of Kenya. In 1967, he joined a successful expedition to the Omo Valley
in Ethiopia. On a flight between Omo and Nairobi, he spotted an expanse of
sedimentary rock on the shores of Lake Turkana, formerly known as Lake Rudolf.
Leakey suspected the area was rich with fossils. When a return trip confirmed
his hunch, he secured funding from the National Geographic Society to run his
own excavation. With a crew of Kenyan fossil hunters who called themselves the
Hominid Gang, he uncovered a rich vein of artifacts that startled the world.
After years in his family’s shadow, Richard Leakey had earned a reputation as
an outstanding fossil hunter in his own right.
In 1968, at the age of 25, he won appointment as director of the
National Museum of Kenya. Within a year, he was diagnosed with a terminal
kidney disease and told he only had ten years to live. In spite of this
diagnosis, he forged ahead with his life. He married zoologist Meave Epps, a
primate specialist who had worked with his father at Tigoni Primate Research
Center. As director of the Museum, Leakey undertook intensive excavation at
Lake Turkana. Over the next 30 years, the site yielded more than 200 fossils,
including two of the most spectacular finds of all time, a virtually complete Homo
habilis skull in 1972 and a Homo
erectus skull in 1975.
By the end of the decade, Leakey’s kidney disease had grown
severe, and he traveled to London to consult a specialist. He received a
transplant from his younger brother, Philip, but within a month, rejection set
in. The drugs that suppressed the rejection weakened his immune system, and he
nearly died from an inflammation of the lungs. Leakey survived, recovered, and
returned to Kenya. In the eight months he had spent abroad, he wrote an
autobiography, One Life, although the most dramatic chapters of his life were yet to
come.
In 1984, his team found one of the most historic specimens of
all, the nearly complete skeleton of a young male Homo
erectus. The 1.6-million-year-old
skeleton, nicknamed Turkana Boy, is one of the most complete hominid fossil
skeletons ever found. Leakey described this discovery and its significance in
the book Origins Reconsidered (1992). In 1985, the site
produced the skull of a previously unknown species of extinct hominid, Australopithecus
aethiopicus.
In nearly 30 years as director of the National Museum, Richard
Leakey had built the institution into a major international research center. In
1989, he accepted an appointment by Kenya’s president, Daniel Arap Moi, to
serve as director of the Kenya Wildlife Service. As director he was called on
to rescue the country’s chaotic park system and combat an epidemic of
rhinoceros and elephant poaching. The illegal demand for the tusks of these
endangered animals was pushing both species to the brink of extinction. Leakey
created well-armed anti-poaching units, and when gentler measures failed,
ordered the shooting of poachers. In 1989, Leakey staged a dramatic burning of
12 tons of confiscated tusks. The elephant population was soon stabilized and
is now growing. Impressed with Leakey’s achievement, the World Bank approved
substantial grants to the Wildlife Service.
Although Leakey’s accomplishments won international recognition,
he had made enemies at home. In 1993, his plane suffered an unexplained
equipment failure and crashed in the mountains outside Nairobi. The accident
cost Leakey both his legs. An expert pilot, he had good reason to suspect
sabotage by political enemies. Undeterred, Leakey returned to work, but
political opposition forced his resignation in 1994. He recounted the
experience in the book Wildlife Wars: My Battle to
Save Kenya’s Elephants (2001).
Long impatient with the corruption and inefficiency of Kenya’s
one-party government, Leakey and other dissidents founded the Safina party in
1995. For two years, the government withheld legal recognition of the party.
Government supporters subjected Leakey to public humiliation, death threats and
constant surveillance, and finally attacked him with whips outside the
courthouse, but Richard Leakey could not be intimidated.
As Secretary General of Safina, he won a seat in his country’s
parliament, where he negotiated constitutional reform and introduced laws
protecting the disabled. In 1999, international lending institutions cut off
aid to Kenya because of rampant corruption in government. Leakey’s sometime
adversary, President Moi, asked Leakey to join the administration as Cabinet
Secretary and head of the Public Service, with a mission to restore the
integrity of the civil administration. Leakey soon earned the confidence of
international donor institutions, and lending to Kenya resumed.
After retiring from government in 2001, Richard Leakey served as
a leading spokesman for Transparency International, a global coalition to fight
corruption, and for the Great Apes Survival Project, a United Nations effort to
defend mankind’s closest relatives. His books include The
Origin of Humankind (1994) and The Sixth Extinction:
Patterns of Life and the Future of Mankind (1995). His wife, Meave Leakey,
and his daughter, Louise, carried on the family mission of searching for the
evidence of human origins in Africa, while Richard Leakey continued his work as
a highly public advocate for the disabled and for Kenya’s kidney patients.
By 2015, the poaching of wildlife that Richard Leakey had done
so much to stop in the 1990s had returned to crisis levels. President Uhuru
Kenytatta asked Richard Leakey to return to the Kenya Wildlife Service as
chairman. At age 70, Richard Leakey took up the challenge, continuing his
lifelong service to the environment and to the continent that gave birth to the
human race.
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