William King Gregory

William King Gregory

Infobox Person
name= William King Gregory


image_size = 160px
caption=
birth_date= birth date|1876|5|19|df=y
birth_place= Greenwich Village, New York
death_date= death date and age|1970|12|29|1876|5|19|df=y
death_place= Woodstock, New York
occupation= Zoologist
spouse= Laura Grace Foote
Angela Bois

William King Gregory (19 May 1876 – 29 December 1970) was an American zoologist, renowned as a primatologist, paleontologist, and functional and comparative morphologist. He was an expert on mammalian dentition, and a leading contributor to theories of evolution. In addition he was active in presenting his ideas to students and the general public through books and museum exhibits.

Early life

He was born in Greenwich Village, New York on 19 May 1876 to George Gregory and Jane King Gregory. He attended Trinity School and then moved onto Columbia University in 1895, initially at the School of Mines but then transferring to Columbia College. He majored in zoology and vertebrate paleontology under Henry Fairfield Osborn. While still an undergraduate he became Osborn's research assistant and soon after married Laura Grace Foote. He received his undergraduate degree from Columbia in 1900, followed by a masters in 1905, and a doctorate in 1910.

Academic career

He developed an early interest in both fishes and the land vertebrates, publishing papers on both groups, including two in "Science" in 1903. By 1911 he had expanded his interests to encompass amphibians with a paper on the limb structure of the Permian "Eryops". Despite his heavy workload he served as editor of the "American Museum Journal" (which would later become "Natural History"). He was formally appointed to the scientific staff at the American Museum of Natural History in 1911 and became part of the teaching faculty at Columbia in 1916, eventually rising to the post of Da Costa Professor in the Department of Zoology. His notable students included Alfred Romer, James Chapin, C.L Camp, and G.K. Noble. He was similarly successful at the museum, becoming full curator of three departments and serving as Chairman of two.

Although his work was wide-ranging the overriding focus was on comparative anatomy. His studies often had particular significance in the field of evolution; he believed the anatomical structures of fossil and extant species should exhibit relationships. His work charted the evolution from the early fishes through the various branches to birds and mammals, with numerous papers and two major works: "Our Face from Fish to Man" in 1929 and "Evolution Emerging" in 1951.

He developed the principle of "habitus and heritage" — theorizing that animals evolved with two sets of characteristics: the "heritage" features which derived from a long evolutionary history and the "habitus" characteristics which were adaptations to the environment in which the species existed. He later expanded this to his "palimpsest" theory which proposed that the "habitus" features often overlaid and obscured the "heritage" features. A similar theory, mosaic evolution has appeared since King Gregory's death.

He studied lemurs and the insectivorous primates, as always concerning himself with evolutionary origins. From the 1920s he became involved in the study of marsupials, in 1947 developing his "palimpsest" theory by showing a connection between the monotremes and early reptiles. Around the early 1920s he also became interested in recent human evolution particularly after the discovery of the early African hominids. His specialist knowledge of mammalian dentition led him to pursue the same path with regard to human evolution and he came to be regarded as the world's leading expert on the evolution of human dentition, a reputation secured by the 1922 publication of "The Evolution of the Human Dentition". However, he did initially think the hoax, Piltdown Man, likely to be genuine. [cite journal|journal=American Museum Journal |author=William King Gregory|title= The Dawn Man of Piltdown, England| date=1914
publisher=American Museum of Natural History
url=http://140.232.1.5/~piltdown/map_favorable_commentary/dawnman_piltengland.html
]

Later life

He retired from the American Museum of Natural History in 1944 and from Columbia in 1945, and moved permanently to his house in Woodstock, New York with his second wife Angela, whom he had married soon after Laura's death in 1937. In 1949 he was awarded the Viking Fund Medal in 1949 for his contributions to physical anthropology. He died in the Woodstock house on 29 December 1970. He had been elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1927 and on his death was one of the oldest members.

Notes

References

*cite book|author=Edwin H. Colbert|title=Biographical Memoirs V.46|date=1975|chapter=William King Gregory|pages=97-106|publisher=National Academy of Sciences (NAS)|url=http://www.nap.edu/books/0309022401/html/90.html

External links

* [http://www.wennergren.org/programs/programs_show.htm?doc_id=370456&attrib_id=13231 Viking Fund Medal]

Persondata
NAME=William King Gregory
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=American Zoologist
DATE OF BIRTH= 19 May 1876
PLACE OF BIRTH= Greenwich Village, New York
DATE OF DEATH= 29 December 1970
PLACE OF DEATH= Woodstock, New York


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