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John R Napier

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Institutions
  
See the text

Name
  
John Napier


Role
  
Author

Notable students
  
Alison Richard

Alma mater
  
Medical College of St Bartholomew's Hospital (MB BS; 1943) University of London (D.Sc.)

Known for
  
Important contributions to primatology and Bigfoot research

Died
  
August 29, 1987, Mull, United Kingdom

Books
  
A handbook of living primates: morphology, ecology and behaviour of nonhuman primates

Education
  
University of London, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry

Fields
  
Primatology, Paleoanthropology

John Russell Napier, MRCS, LRCP, D.Sc. (1917 – 29 August 1987) was a British primatologist, paleoanthropologist, and physician, who is notable for his work with Homo habilis and OH 7, as well as on human and primate hands/feet. During his life he was widely considered a leading authority on primate taxonomy, but is perhaps most famous to the general public for his research on Bigfoot.

Contents

Biography

Napier was an orthopedic surgeon at the University of London before being invited by Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark to join him in his paleoanthropology research. Napier then dedicated his life afterward to primatology, becoming the founder of the Primate Society of Great Britain, and was among the group, with Louis Leakey and Philip Tobias, that named Homo habilis in the 1960s.

Napier later became Director of the Primate Biology Program at the Smithsonian Institution, where he examined the famous purported footage of Bigfoot, the Patterson–Gimlin film. After leaving the Smithsonian, Napier became a Visiting Professor of Primate Biology at Birkbeck College in London. He also served as President of Twycross Zoo in Leicestershire, England. Napier was married to British primatologist Prudence Hero Napier (1916 – 6 June 1997), the daughter of Sir Hugo Rutherford.

Bigfoot research

Napier was one of the first notable scientists to give serious attention to the Bigfoot/Sasquatch phenomenon. His investigations included interviewing amateur investigators and purported eyewitnesses, visiting alleged Bigfoot sighting areas, studying the scant physical evidence, and screening the 1967 Patterson–Gimlin film. Napier concluded the film was a clever hoax: "the scientific evidence taken collectively points to a hoax of some kind." However, by the same token, in reference to the Patterson–Gimlin film, Napier did also state on page 89 of his 1973 book 'Bigfoot: The Yeti And Sasquatch In Myth And Reality', "there was nothing in this film which would prove conclusively that this was a hoax."

In his 1973 book on the subject, Napier ultimately judged the evidence to be inconclusive: there was not enough hard proof to confirm to Napier that Bigfoot was a real creature. However, Napier judged the indirect evidence – especially footprints – as compelling and intriguing enough to avoid dismissing the subject as entirely unworthy of serious study.

Lectures

In 1970 he was invited to deliver the Royal Institution Christmas Lecture on Monkeys Without Tails: A Giraffe's Eye-view of Man.

Institutions

  • St Bartholomew's Hospital, Senior House Surgeon, Chief Assistant to the Orthopaedic Unit, Registrar of the Peripheral Nerve Injury Unit (1934–1946)
  • University College London Medical School, Demonstrator in the Department of Anatomy (1944–1949)
  • King's College London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Lecturer in Anatomy (1949–1967); Director of the Unit of Primatology and Human Evolution (1952–1967)
  • Smithsonian Institution, Conservator of the Division of Mammals and Director of the Unit of Primatology and Human Evolution (1967–1969)
  • Queen Elizabeth College, Director of the Program in Primate Biology (1969–1973)
  • Birkbeck College, Visiting Professor of Primate Biology (1973–1978)
  • References

    John R. Napier Wikipedia