Education
He took his first degree from the University of Cape Town in 1958 before studying for his Doctor of Philosophy at Peterhouse, Cambridge which he completed in 1969.
anthropologist archaeologist university professor
He took his first degree from the University of Cape Town in 1958 before studying for his Doctor of Philosophy at Peterhouse, Cambridge which he completed in 1969.
He has been called the most influential Africanist of the last half century, and his papers on human movement and behavior are still cited in studies a quarter of a century later. He was also Warden for Prehistoric Sites in Kenya between 1961 and 1962 and Deputy Director of the Centre for Prehistory and Palaeontology at the National Museums of Kenya from 1963 to 1965. Working with Richard Leakey, he was co-director of the East African Koobi Fora project
In 1966 he joined the anthropology department at the University of California, Berkeley and in 1983 he was appointed Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University where he was developing new research projects at the time of his death.
He died in 1985 in Yokosuka, Japan due to illness, at the age of 47.