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Frank B Livingstone

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Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
Anthropologist


Name
  
Frank Livingstone

Education
  
Harvard University

Born
  
December 8, 1928
Winchester, Massachusetts, U.S.

Alma mater
  
Harvard University (B.A.)

Relatives
  
Guy P. Livingstone (father) Margery Brown Livingstone (mother)

Died
  
March 21, 2005, Springfield, Ohio, United States

Books
  
Frequencies of Hemoglobin Variants: Thalassemia, the Glucose-6-phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency, G6PD Variants, and Ovalocytosis in Human Populations

Frank B. Livingstone (December 8, 1928 – March 21, 2005) was an American biological anthropologist.

Contents

Early life and education

Livingstone was born in Winchester, Massachusetts to Guy P. Livingstone and Margery Brown Livingstone. He graduated from Winchester High School in 1946 and earned his bachelor's degree in Mathematics at Harvard University in 1950. He completed a doctoral degree in 1957 and joined the University of Michigan’s anthropology faculty in 1959 where he became Professor Emeritus of Biological Anthropology.

Career

Livingstone's primary area of research was genetic variation in modern human populations. For his groundbreaking work on sickle cell anemia, Livingstone was awarded the Martin Luther King Award from the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. After his retirement in 1998, Livingstone was awarded the Charles R. Darwin Award for Lifetime Achievement from the American Association of Physical Anthropologists (AAPA). In 2002, a symposium was held in his honor at the annual meeting of the AAPA in Buffalo, New York.

Death

Livingstone died on March 21, 2005 in Springfield, Ohio, due to complications from Parkinson's disease.

References

Frank B. Livingstone Wikipedia