Davidson Black
Davidson Black, FRS (1884 – 1934) was a Canadian paleoanthropologist, best known for his discovery of Sinanthropus pekinensis (now Homo erectus pekinensis). He was Chairman of the Geological Survey of China and a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was known as 步達生 in China.
Early years
Davidson Black was born in 1884, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. When he was a child, he would spend many summers near or on the Kawartha lakes. When he was a teenager, he would carry heavy loads of supplies for the Hudson's Bay Company. He also enjoyed collecting fossils along the banks of the Don River. He also became friends with First Nations people, in addition to learning one First Nations language. Additionally, Black unsuccessfully searched for gold along the Kawartha lakes.
In 1906, Black gained a degree in medical science from the University of Toronto. He continued in School studying comparative anatomy. In 1909 he became an anatomy instructor. In 1914 he spent half a year working under neuroanatomist Grafton Elliot Smith, in Manchester, England. Smith was studying Piltdown Man during this time. This began an interest in human evolution.
1917 he joined Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps, where he treated injured returning Canadian Soldiers.
Later years
In 1919 after being discharged from the Canadian Army Medical Corps, he went to Peking, China, in order to work at Peking Union Medical College. At first he was Professor of Neurology and Embryology. He would be promoted to head of the anatomy department in 1924. He planned on going on a search for human fossils in 1926, though the College encouraged him to concentrate on his teaching obligations. During this period, Johan Gunnar Andersson, who had done excavations near Dragon Bone Hill (Zhoukoudian) in 1921, attained information of his fossils examination in Sweden. There were two human-similar molars, which he gave to Black to further examine. The following year, with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, Black began his search around Zhoukoudian. During this time, many western Scientists left China due to military unrest involving the National Revolutionary Army. Davidson Black and his family did not, though.
Black then launched a large scale investigation at the site. He was appointed primary coordinator. As such, he appointed both Caucasian and Chinese scientists. One of the scientists working there discovered a Homo erectus pekinensis tooth in the fall of 1927, which Black thought belonged to a new human species, named (by him) Sinanthropus pekinensis. He put this tooth in a locket, which was placed around his neck.
Later, he presented the tooth to the Rockefeller Foundation, which wanted more specimens before further grants would be given.
During November 1928, a lower jaw and several teeth and skull fragments were discovered. His find greatly expanded the knowledge of human evolution. Black presented this to the Foundation, which granted him $80,000. This grant continued the investigation and Black established the Cenozoic Research Laboratory with it.
Later another excavator found a skull. More specimens were found. Black would frequently examine these, late into the night.
Alas, most of the original bones were lost when the ship that was carrying them sank off the coast of China. Only the plaster imprints, which were in Beijing at the time, were left.
In 1934, he was hospitalized due to heart problems but he continued working when they released him; these heart problems killed him. He died in his office with the fossils of the Peking Man beside him [1]. He was 49 years of age.
Scepticism of research
Fellow researchers were skeptical of Sinanthropus pekinensis as a distinctive species and genus. The reasons were the fact that the claim of a new species was originally based on a single tooth. Later the species was categorized as a subspecies of Homo erectus.
Others, such as creationists, were (and are) skeptical of Peking Man as a transitional species. They claim it is a mix of human and ape fossils, or a deformed human.
Trivia
- He married his wife, Adena Nevitt, in 1913, who accompanied him on his trips. They had two children together, a son (b. 1921) and a daughter (b. 1925). Both were born in China.
- Dissimilar to most Caucasians of his era, Davidson Black tolerated and respected his Chinese coworkers. In return, he was well liked by many of them, who put flowers on his grave after his death.
- Black believed artifacts discovered in China should be kept there.
- Gigantopithecus blacki was named in his honour [1].
- Author Dora Ridout Hood wrote a biography on him, called Davidson Black : a biography, which was printed by the University of Toronto Press [2].
- G.H. Smith, the Neuroanatomist he worked under, wrote his obituary [3].
- Davidson Black showed an interest in Biology at an early age, despite being born to a family association with law. [4]
Quote
- "The Peking man was a thinking being, standing erect, dating to the beginning of the Ice Age." [5]
Publications
- "Skeletal Remains of Sinanthropus Other Than Skull Parts." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. XI, No. 4, 1932.
- "Evidences of the Use of Fire by Sinanthropus." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. XI, No. 2, Peiping, 1931.
- "Palæogeography and Polar Shift. A Study of Hypothetical Projections." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. X, Peiping, 1931.
- "Notice of the Recovery of a Second Adult Sinanthropus Skull Specimen." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. IX, No. 2, 1930.
- "Interim Report on the Skull of Sinanthropus." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. IX, No. I, 1930.
- "Preliminary Notice of the Discovery of an Adult Sinanthropus Skull at Chou Kou Tien." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. VIII, No. 3, 1929.
- "Preliminary Note on Additional Sinanthropus Material Discovered in Chou Kou Tien During 1923." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. VIII, No. 1, 1929.
- "The Aeneolithic Yang Shao People of North China." Reprinted from the Transactions of the 6th Congress of the Far Eastern Association of Tropical Medicine. Tokyo, Japan, 1925.
- "Asia and the Dispersal of Primates." Reprinted From the Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. IV, No. 2., 1925.
- "A Note of the Physical Characters of the Prehistoric Kansu Race." From Memoirs of the Geological Survey of China, Series A, No. 5, June, 1925.