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Donald Johanson    

Paleoanthropologist

Donald Johanson is an American paleoanthropologist and the founder of the Institute of Human Origins. He went on his first exploratory expedition to Ethiopia in 1972, and the following year completed his PhD and began teaching at Case Western Reserve University. In 1974 he discovered AL 288-1, a partial skeleton of a female australopithecine who soon became world-renowned as "Lucy." In 1975 he and his team found a major collection of fossils, known as "The First Family," at a single site. In 1976, more hominid fossils were discovered, along with stone tools which, at 2.5 million years, were the oldest in the world. In 1978, he and his colleague, Tim White, named the species he had discovered Australopithecus afarensis.

In 1981, Johanson founded the Institute of Human Origins, a non-profit research institution devoted to the study of prehistory. He is the author of several books including, most recently, "Lucy's Legacy: The Quest for Human Origins" (with Kate Wong, Harmony Books, 2009)

Speech Topics


Olduvai Gorge: Myth and Reality

Work at Olduvai Gorge spawned a variety of ideas about how our early ancestors lived nearly two million years ago. Johanson reviews recent research and challenges a number of those ideas.

Lucy’s Legacy

Johanson shares Lucy’s discovery in 1974 and explores the lessons learned from looking at humanity through the lens of time.

The Origins of Humankind: The View From Africa

Numerous new African finds are prompting revisions in the number of species in our past and substantiating Darwin’s hunch that Africa was the cradle of humankind.

News


'Unimaginable' discovery could rewrite the history of human ancestry ...
PBS NewsHour Reporter/Producer David Coles interviewed Dr. Donald Johanson, co-discoverer of one of the oldest-known human ancestors known as " Lucy.
'Mind-boggling' skull discovery offers researchers a view into the ...
DONALD JOHANSON, Arizona State University: Well, I think it's absolutely ... DONALD JOHANSON: Well, at the site of Dmanisi, which is just about 20 kilometers ...

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