
Roy Chapman Andrews
:''For the former professional American football coach see
LeRoy Andrews''
'Roy Chapman Andrews' (
January 26,
1884–
March 11,
1960) was an
American explorer,
adventurer and
naturalist who became the director of the
American Museum of Natural History, primarily known for leading a series of expeditions through the fragmented
China of the early 20th century into the
Gobi Desert and
Mongolia. The expeditions made important discoveries and brought the first-known
fossil dinosaur eggs. in the world to the museum. Many of Andrews's encounters and narrow escapes from death have been reported, including incidents with whales, sharks, pythons, and armed Chinese bandits. He was erroneously reported dead at least once.
Douglas Preston of the
American Museum of Natural History wrote:
:Andrews is allegedly the real person that the movie character of
Indiana Jones was patterned after. Andrews was an accomplished stage master. He created an image and lived it out impeccably—there was no chink in his armor. Roy Chapman Andrews: famous explorer, dinosaur hunter, exemplar of Anglo-Saxon virtues, crack shot, fighter of Mongolian brigands, the man who created the metaphor of 'Outer Mongolia' as denoting any exceedingly remote place.
[1]
Early life and education
Andrews was born on January 26, 1884, in
Beloit,
Wisconsin, at 419 St. Lawrence Avenue. As a child, he explored forests, fields, and waters nearby, developing
marksmanship skills. He taught himself
taxidermy and used funds from this hobby to pay tuition to
Beloit College, where he was a member of
Sigma Chi.
On March 31, 1905, during his junior year in College, Andrews was boating on the
Rock River in bad conditions when his craft capsized; his friend, Monty White, died in the cold waters, but Andrews survived. After graduation the following year, Andrews used some of his money saved from taxidermy to travel to
New York City to find a job at the American Museum of Natural History. Told that there were no openings, Andrews took a job as a janitor in the taxidermy department and began collecting specimens for the museum. During the next few years, he worked and studied simultaneously, earning a
Master of Arts degree in
mammalogy from
Columbia University.
Career
From 1909 to 1910, Andrews sailed on the ''
USS Albatross'' to the
East Indies, collecting snakes and lizards and observing
marine mammals. He married Yvette Borup in 1914. From 1916 to 1917, Andrews and his wife led the Asiatic Zoological Expedition of the museum through much of western and southern
Yunnan, as well as other
provinces of China. The book ''
Camps and Trails in China'' records their experiences.
In 1920, Andrews began planning for expeditions to
Mongolia and drove a fleet of
Dodge cars westward from
Peking. In 1922, the party discovered a fossil of ''
Indricotherium'' (then named "''
Baluchitherium''"), a gigantic hornless
rhinoceros, which was sent back to the museum, arriving on December 19.
On July 13, 1923, the party was the first in the world to discover
dinosaur eggs. Initially thought to belong to the
ceratopsian ''
Protoceratops'', they were determined in
1995 to actually belong to the
theropod ''
Oviraptor''
[1].
Walter W. Granger discovered a skull from the
Cretaceous period. In 1925, the museum sent a letter back informing the party that the skull was that of a mammal, and therefore rare and valuable; more were uncovered. Expeditions in the area stopped during 1926 and 1927. In 1928, the expedition's finds were seized by Chinese authorities but were eventually returned. The 1929 expedition was cancelled. In 1930, he made one final trip and discovered some
mastodon fossils. (Sixty years after Andrews' initial expedition, the American Museum of Natural History returned to Mongolia on the invitation of its government to continue exploration.) Later that year, Andrews returned to the United States and divorced his wife, with whom he had two sons.
Andrews joined The Explorers Club in New York in 1908, four years after its founding. He later served as its President from 1931 to 1934. In 1934, Andrews became the director of the museum. In his 1935 book ''
The Business of Exploring'', he wrote "I was born to be an explorer...There was never any decision to make. I couldn't do anything else and be happy." In 1942, Andrews retired to
Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, where he wrote about his life and died in 1960.
He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in his hometown of Beloit.
Books
::::: see
★ ''Monographs of the Pacific Cetacea'' (1914-16)
★ ''Whale Hunting With Gun and Camera'' (1916)
★ ''Camps and Trails in China'' (1918)
★ ''Across Mongolian Plains'' (1920)
★ ''On The Trail of Ancient Man'' (1926)
★ ''Ends of the Earth'' (1929)
★ ''The New Conquest of Central Asia'' (1932)
★ ''This Business of Exploring'' (1935)
★ ''Exploring with Andrews'' (1938)
★ ''This Amazing Planet'' (c1940)
★ ''Under a Lucky Star, A Lifetime of Adventure'' by Roy Chapman Andrews (1943)
[2]
★ ''Meet your Ancestors, A Biography of Primitive Man'' (1945)
★ ''An Explorer Comes Home: Further Adventures of Roy Chapman Andrews'' (1947)
★ ''My Favorite Stories of the Great Outdoors'' (1950)
★ ''Quest in the Desert'' (1950)
★ ''Heart of Asia: True Tales of the Far East'' (1951)
★ ''Nature's Way: How Nature Takes Care of Her Own'' (1951)
★ ''All About Dinosaurs'' (1953)
★ ''All About Whales'' (1954)
★ ''Beyond Adventure: The Lives of Three Explorers'' (1954)
★ ''Quest of the Snow Leopard'' (1955)
★ ''All About Strange Beasts of the Past'' (1956)
★ ''In the Days of the Dinosaurs'' (1959)
References
1. Dinosaurs in the Attic: An Excursion Into the American Museum of Natural History, , Douglas J., Preston, St. Martin's Press, 1993, ISBN 0-312-10456-1 , pp. 97-98
2. ''Discover''
Sources
★
Roy Chapman Andrews Society official website
★ ''Dragon Hunter''; biography by Charles Gallenkamp (2001)
External links
★