Richard Leakey: Fossils, Elephants, and a Life That Refused to Quit

A pilot lies in a hospital bed, both legs about to be amputated after a suspected sabotage crash. The president of Kenya arrives to offer prayers. The pilot waves him off and says: don’t pray for me, just act on the matters pending for the Kenya Wildlife Service. That single moment captures the relentless force of nature that was Richard Leakey.

This episode unpacks an almost unbelievable life that spanned paleoanthropology, militarized conservation, and bare-knuckle politics. We follow Leakey from a wild childhood in the African bush to the discovery of fossils that proved humanity’s African origins, then into a literal war to save elephants and a final career as a political reformer and tech-savvy conservationist.

  • How a rebellious skeleton-supply business became his real education and made him a master paleoanthropologist without a university pedigree
  • The cutthroat 1968 National Geographic coup where he diverted his own father’s funding to his unproven Koobi Fora dig
  • Why Turkana Boy, a nearly complete 1.6-million-year-old skeleton, became the blueprint for human bipedalism
  • The 12-ton ivory bonfire and shoot-to-kill anti-poaching units that defined his ruthless leadership of the Kenya Wildlife Service
  • His late-career pivot from building fences to brokering a railway viaduct over Nairobi National Park, trading purist ideals for pragmatic coexistence

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