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Raymond Arthur Dart

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Raymond Arthur Dart

(born Feb. 4, 1893, Toowong, Brisbane, Queen., Austl. — died Nov. 22, 1988, Johannesburg, S.Af.) Australian-born South African physical anthropologist and paleontologist. In 1925, when Asia was still believed to be the cradle of humankind, Dart's announcement of the discovery of the Taung skull near the Kalahari substantiated Charles Darwin's prediction that such ancestral hominin forms would be found in Africa. Dart named the skull, establishing it as the type specimen of a new genus and species, Australopithecus africanus. He lived to see his findings corroborated by additional discoveries that firmly established Africa as the site of human origins. Dart taught at the University of the Witwatersrand from 1923 to 1958.

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Scientist: Raymond Arthur Dart
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Australian anatomist (1893–1988)

Born in Toowong, Australia, Dart was educated at the universities of Queensland and Sydney where he qualified as a physician in 1917. After a short period (1919–22) at University College, London, Dart moved to South Africa to serve as professor of anatomy at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, a post he held until his retirement in 1958.

In 1924 Dart was privileged to make one of the great paleontological discoveries of the century, the Taung skull. For this he was indebted to his student Josephine Salmons who brought him in the summer of 1924 a fossil collected from a mine at Taung, Bechuanaland. Dart named it Australopithecus africanus, meaning southern African ape, and declared it to be intermediate between anthropoids and man. Such a claim was far from acceptable to many scholars at the time who, like Arthur Keith, dismissed the skull as that of a young anthropoid. Other and older australopithecine remains were later discovered by Robert Broom in South Africa, East Africa, and Asia, making it clear that they were in fact hominid. It is still however a matter of controversy whether Australopithecus lies in the direct line of descent to Homo sapiens or whether it represents a quite separate and unsuccessful evolutionary sideline.

Archaeology Dictionary: Raymond Arthur Dart
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(1893–1988) [Bi]

South African anthropologist best known for his discovery of the first Australopithecine fossil in 1924. Born in Brisbane, he trained as a doctor at Sydney University Medical School before serving in WW1 with the Australian army medical corps. After the war he went to London to pursue his research in brain anatomy at University College. At the age of 30 he was appointed Professor of Anatomy at the fledgling Medical School in the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, a post he remained in until his retirement. In 1924 he was shown a fossil skull from Taungs near Kimberley and realized that it was an extremely early hominid of a type previously unrecognized. He named it Australopithecus, much to the dismay of those in the academic world who realized that the word was a cocktail of Greek and Latin. Although the place of Australopithecus in hominid evolution at the time of its discovery was hotly contested, Dart lived to see his views confirmed by finds at Olduvai and elsewhere. In 1966 he was made United Steelworkers of America Professor of Anthropology at the Institute for the Achievement of Human Potential in Philadelphia, USA.

[Obit.: Antiquaries Journal, 69 (1989), 404–5]

 
 

 

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