Everything about Raymond Dart totally explained
Raymond Dart (
February 4 1893 –
November 22 1988) was an
Australian
anatomist and
anthropologist best known for his discovery in 1924 of a fossil of
Australopithecus (
extinct hominids closely related to humans) at
Taung in Northwestern
South Africa. The son of a farmer and tradesman, he was married twice and had two children.
Early life
He was born in
Toowong, Queensland, Australia and studied at
Ipswich Grammar School, the
University of Queensland,
University of Sydney and
University College, London, before taking a position as head of the newly established department of
anatomy at the
University of Witwatersrand in
Johannesburg,
South Africa in 1922.
The discovery
In 1924, a
limestone quarry owner at
Taung shipped Dart a box of fossiliferous rock. Digging around in it, Dart found an
endocranial cast, and then its matching fossil skullpiece. Dart examined this
Taung Child fossil, as it came to be known, and pronounced it to be a new species,
Australopithecus africanus. Dart postulated his new find to be a missing link between
apes and humans because of its small
brain size, but relatively human-like
dentition and a probable upright
posture.
Dart's discovery and Dart himself were initially heavily criticized by the eminent anthropologists of the day, most notably
Sir Arthur Keith who claimed the Taung Child to be nothing other than a juvenile
gorilla. Because the specimen was indeed a juvenile, there was a lot of room for interpretation, and because African origins for mankind and the development of
bipedalism before a human-like brain were both inconsistent with the prevailing
evolutionary notions of the time, Dart and his Child became the butt of many attacks.
Vindication and disagreement
Dart's closest ally was
Robert Broom whose discoveries of further
australopithecines (as well as
Wilfrid Le Gros Clark's support) eventually vindicated Dart. So much so that in 1947, Sir Arthur Keith said "...Dart was right, and I was wrong."
Not all of Dart's ideas are accepted today. His assertion that
gazelle long-bones found in association with
Australopithecus africanus were used as
tools is unproven and largely dismissed. Dart also originated the
killer ape theory. Although some other anthropologists, notably
Robert Ardrey, defended and further developed the theory, it's still widely questioned.
His legacy
The
Institute for the Study of Man in Africa was established in 1956 at Witwatersrand in his honor.
Dart continued in his position as director of the School of Anatomy at
University of Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, until 1958. There he worked with
Phillip Tobias, who continues his work in the study of the
Cradle of Humankind and other
paleoanthropological sites. In 1959, an autobiographical account of Dart's discovery was published,
Adventures with the Missing Link.
At the age of 73, Dart began dividing his time between South Africa and
The Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential (IAHP), an organization founded by
Glenn Doman. Dart spent much of the next twenty years working with the IAHP, an organization that treats brain injured children.
Bibliography
- Dart R.A. (1925): Australopithecus africanus: the man-ape of South Africa
. Nature, 115:195-9 (the original paper communicating the Taung finding, in PDF format).
- Dart, R.A. (1953): "The Predatory Transition from Ape to Man." International Anthropological and Linguistic Review, 1, pp. 201-217.
- Dart, Raymond and Craig, Dennis (1959): Adventures with the Missing Link. New York: Harper & Brothers (autobiography).
- Fagan, Brian. The Passion of Raymond Dart. Archaeology v. 42 (May-June 1989): p. 18.
- Johanson, Donald & Maitland Edey. Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990 ISBN 0-671-25036-1
- Alexander Murray, ed. (1996): Skill and Poise: Articles on skill, poise and the F. M. Alexander Technique. Collection of Raymond Dart's papers. Hardcover, 192+xiv pages, b/w illustrations, 234 x 156 mm, index, UK, STAT Books.
Further Information
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