80%
of our annual budget goes to
Science and Education
» learn more

The Leakey Foundation is pleased to announce we were given an 80% Efficiency Rating during our most recent audit.

This means the 80% of our annual budget is granted to scientists and used for our educational programs.

In the American Institute of Philanthropy’s view, 60% or greater is reasonable for most charities and the most highly efficient charities are able to spend 75% or more on programs.

From the AIP website: "AIP is a nationally prominent charity watchdog service whose purpose is to help donors make informed giving decisions."

We spend the remaining percentage on fundraising efforts and general administration.*

* AIP has not officially rated The Leakey Foundation.

News

Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human
Upcoming Speaker Series Lecture

Annual Speaker Series on Human Origins, Behavioral, Calendar of Events, news_one, Primatology

Dr. Richard Wrangham, Professor at Harvard University and co-director of the Kibale Chimpanzee Project

Ever since Darwin and The Descent of Man, the existence of humans has been attributed to our intelligence and adaptability. Renowned primatologist Richard Wrangham presents a startling alternative: our evolutionary success is the result of cooking. In a groundbreaking theory of our origins, Dr. Wrangham will show that the shift from raw to cooked foods was the key factor in human evolution.

When our ancestors adapted to using fire, humanity began.

Once our hominid ancestors began cooking their food, the human digestive tract shrank and the brain grew. Time once spent chewing tough raw food could be used instead to hunt and to tend camp. Cooking became the basis for pair bonding and marriage, created the household, and even led to a sexual division of labor.

Tracing the contemporary implications of our ancestors’ diets, Dr. Wrangham sheds new light on how we came to be the social, intelligent, and sexual species we are today. A pathbreaking new theory of human evolution, Dr. Wrangham will fascinate anyone interested in our ancient origins or in our modern eating habits.

Dr. Richard Wrangham is the Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard University. He is co-director of the Kibale Chimpanzee Project, the long-term study of chimpanzees in Kibale National Park, Uganda. His research culminates in the study of human evolution in which he draws conclusions based on the behavioral ecology of apes. As a graduate student, Dr. Wrangham studied under Robert Hinde and Jane Goodall. He also helped the late Dian Fossey establish her eponymous Gorilla Fund to protect and research the Mountain Gorillas of Rwanda.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012 @ 6:30pm

Houston Museum of Natural Science

General Admission: $18

HMNS, Leakey Foundation & Harvard Club Members: $12

Please call the Museum Box Office at (713) 639-4629 or reserve your ticket online.

There will be a book signing immediately after the lecture. Reserve your copy of Catching Fire by Dr. Richard Wrangham now.

If you are on Facebook, let us know you are coming on the Facebook event page for this lecture.

Generous support provided by Wells Fargo Bank.

posted on January 9th, 2012


Do You Accept Evolution? Keep Human Origins Research Alive, Donate Today.

News, news_one

As the festivities of the holidays approach, The Leakey Foundation has much to celebrate. Here are some of the Foundation’s highlights from 2011:

  • Funded $762,000 in grants to scientists; an increase of $26,000 over last year’s amount
  • Funded six scholars from developing countries through the Baldwin Fellowship Program
  • Offered five public lectures across the nation with the Speaker Series on Human Origins
  • Provided over 1,000 youth, face-to face learning opportunities in the classroom with leading scientists through the Leakey Learning Expeditions Program
  • Received an 80% Efficiency Rating for our 2010 audit, meaning 80% of our annual budget is granted to researchers and used for educational outreach
  • Provided emergency funding to a Grantee who was at risk of discontinuing a decades worth of research in Indonesia, due to lack of other institutional funding
  • Reached over 113,000 followers on Twitter, and we are #10 on Twitter’s list of top 20 science accounts to follow (above the journal Scientific American (#19)

We were able to accomplish this during a challenging economic climate, because of the ongoing support of our donors. Funding for human origins research is becoming all too scarce, and biological evolution is discounted by 61% of the American population. The Leakey Foundation seeks to preserve grant-funding levels, while continuing educational outreach for adults and youth. Our work has never been more important.

There is no easier way to support science while garnering a tax-deductible donation. With your 2011 end of year contribution, a generous donor has pledged to give one dollar for every two dollars that you give, thus making sure your contribution will go further!

Please click here to donate to The Leakey Foundation. You may give a one-time holiday gift, or give on a monthly basis with an ‘automatic payment’ donation.

Thank you for your generous support!

posted on December 13th, 2011


Dispatches from the Amazon

News

In November, Board President Don Dana, along with Leakey Grantees Nick Toth and Kathy Schick ventured into the dense jungle of the Amazon Rainforest in search of the Huaorani tribe. Their quest… to learn about the Huaorani’s method of hunting with blowguns and poison darts, dipped in curare. Though The Leakey Foundation did not have a hand in funding this amazing trip, we thought you’d enjoy reading Don’s dispatches from deep in the Amazon. Read them here:

November 10: Departure from Quito

Drove south from Quito through Avenida de Los Volcanos. Many of the volcanos continue to be very active. Crossed the Andes at Banos, the Gateway to the Amazon, heading for Shiripuno River. The last two legs of our travel were by small planes and dugout canoes.

November 11: Contact with Huaorani

Amazon Dispatch Settlement

Made contact with the Huaorani. Homes are thatched huts with earthen floors used my multiple families. The Huaorani were discovered in the mid 1950s by discovering the bodies of the first five missionaries who tried to make contact with them. Contrary to popular misinformation, the Huaorani are not cannibals, nor to they shrink heads. The head shrinking is done by the Shwar, the tribe immediately south of here.

The woman in the photo is Dawa, one of the first Huaorani to meet, but not subsequently kill missionaries. She is the only family member to have survived first contact. The rest died from polio and other diseases caught from the missionaries.

November 13: Hunting Methods


The Huaorani hunt with spears and blowguns, but are best known for their blowguns, which shoot darts tipped with curare poison. The hunters can easily hit small birds and monkeys from 30 yards or more. The black colored poison on the tip of the darts paralyzes the muscles of the hunted animal.


The Huaorani eat all that they kill, and everyone in the village shares the meat. Although women and men do different work, women have equal status with men. One of the main jobs of women is to make chicha for the men when they return from the hunt. The drink is made by women thoroughly chewing the yucca plant, spitting out the mixture, then letting the liquid ferment.

posted on December 13th, 2011


23 Grants Awarded in Fall 2011 Granting Session

Behavioral, News, news_two, Paleoanthropology, Primatology

We’re approaching the end of the year and the conclusion of our Fall 2011 Granting Session. Our Scientific Executive Committee (SEC) and outside peers have reviewed all applications, and have make their recommendations for funding distribution. This fall, we received 74 applications for grants in Behavioral and Paleoanthropology categories, of which the reviewers have recommended 20 grants for funding, totaling $254,287. The chart above shows the breakdown of recommended funding by subcategory of all the applications. Here are some quick facts about this fall’s session:

  • There were 35 applications in Paleoanthropology, and 39 in Behavioral
  • 8 applications were recommended in Behavioral for a total of $125,553.00
  • 12 applications were recommended in Paleoanthropology for a total of $128,734.00
  • 3 additional applications were funded by trustees of the Foundation for a total of $32,000.
Final approval of all grants were made at our December Board Meeting and Granting Session December 3.

posted on December 13th, 2011


Holiday Gifts from The Leakey Collection

News

Leakey Collection - Necklaces

A terrible drought that ended in 2001 devastated the pasture lands of the Maasai in Kenya’s Rift Valley. The Maasai women desperately needed a way to obtain medical supplies, and to feed, clothe, and educate their children. Philip and Katy Leakey, who live among the Maasai in the bush, came up with an idea that would utilize the excellent beading abilities of the Maasai women, and it used grass, an available sustainable resource, as the primary element.

Soon after, Maasai women were harvesting grass, one blade at a time. The long grass was dried and cut into bead-size pieces and dyed lovely hues, which were then strung into jewelry. Zulugrass was born.

These Zulugrass designs, available for purchase here, make unique gifts while providing economic opportunity to the Maasai communities. To purchase jewelry from The Leakey Collection, visit our store.

 

posted on December 13th, 2011


Leakey Travel: Trip to Africa, 2012

News

Undoubtably, the best way to explore Kenya’s rich human prehistorical landscapes is to travel with The Leakey Foundation and our distinguished Grantees. The 2012 Human History of Kenya tour and extension have been designed not only to address paleoanthropological research and discoveries, but also to explore the native cultures and wildlife who call Kenya their homeland today.

The 2012 Human History of Kenya tour and extension provides guests a VIP experience gaining privileged access to field sites and museums to learn about important human origins research, with opportunities to meet the scientists making those headline grabbing discoveries. This trip is truly unique and is designed especially for Leakey Fellows.  To learn more visit our travel page.

 

 

posted on November 1st, 2011


A Debate: Who Was the Hobbit?
Upcoming Speaker Series Event

Annual Speaker Series on Human Origins, Calendar of Events, News, news_two

Homo-floresiensis-vs-sapiens

A Homo floresiensis skull (left) compared to a Homo sapien skull on the right. Photo courtesy of Peter Brown

In the history of exploring human origins, there has never been a more baffling discovery than the extraordinary Homo floresiensis, now known as world-famous as the “Hobbit”. Found on an obscure Indonesian island in 2004, this tiny, small-brained, big-footed hominin is unlike any other discovery.

But who was this 14,000 year old being, and who were its ancestors? These questions fuel a huge debate among paleoanthropologists. Is the fairly complete LB1 skeleton simply a modern human wracked with genetic disease. Maybe it belongs to a “dwarfed” island species descended from the renowned Homo erectus of nearby Java? Or was this individual a remote descendant of the very first hominin ancestors to exit Africa?

Depending on the answer, this little person may make a crucial contribution to our knowledge of the early evolution of modern humans. In this light-hearted debate, two eminent biological anthropologists, Dr. Robert Martin of Chicago’s Field Museum, and Dr. Ian Tattersall of the American Museum of Natural History in New York, will present contrasting viewpoints on this amazing find, and attempt to lift a corner of the veil that still obscures one of paleoanthropology’s most intriguing mysteries.

Who Was the Hobbit?

A Debate with Dr. Robert D. Martin, Curator of Biological Anthropology at The Field Museum and Dr. Ian Tattersall, Curator at The American Museum of Natural History

Featuring Guest Moderator:
Roy Eisenhardt,
Former President of the California Academy of Sciences

Tuesday, December 6, 2011 @ 7pm
California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, CA

General Admission: $15  /  Members and Seniors: $12
Please call (415) 379-8000 or click here to reserve your ticket.

Let us know you are coming on our Facebook page!

Generous support provided by Wells Fargo Bank.

Robert Martin, Curator, The Field Museum of Natural History Ian Tattersall, Curator, American Museum of Natural History
Dr. Robert D. Martin, Curator of Biological Anthropology at The Field Museum Dr. Ian Tattersall, Curator at The American Museum of Natural History

posted on October 26th, 2011


Leakey Grantees Final Reports Now Available

News

Interested in the latest research funded by The Leakey Foundation? Final Reports from our most recent pool of grantees are now available on our website. Whether you’re an avid science enthusiast, or a scientist yourself, our grantees’ Final Reports give you a glimpse at a broad range of the most current research into human origins. View the Final Reports here.

posted on October 26th, 2011


Students and Educators: Become a Member of the Leakey Foundation!

News

Matthew Heinz, Leakey Grantee

Did You Know? Students and Educators can become a member of the Leakey Foundation for just $60! Get advanced notice of events, and discounts on tickets and merchandise.

Whether you are a young scientist aspiring to be a future grantee, or an educator encouraging students to take a closer look at our evolutionary past, you play a vital role in the continuation of our mission. Our members enable us to provide speaker series, learning expeditions, research grants, and fellowships that help students in a developing countries obtain advanced degrees.

For over 40 years, Foundation members have enjoyed a front row seat to the unfolding story of our human origins. The membership is now a diverse group of science patrons of all ages and many different nationalities. 80% of our annual budget is granted to scientists and used for our educational programs to fuel our understanding of how we developed as humans. Last year, we were able to give away $762,000 in grants, but we can’t do it without your support.

Support the study of human origins. Become a Leakey Foundation Member today!

posted on October 10th, 2011


Grant Funding Increases Despite Tough Economy

News, news_one

Grants Given by The Leakey Foundation

In these tough economic times, we work hard to maintain our grant funding for scientific research projects. Despite this challenging environment, we have been able to increase our grant funding over the last two years, adding $85,000 overall to our total annual grants given since 2008.

In addition, 80% of our total budget goes to science research and education, making The Leakey Foundation a highly efficient non-profit foundation providing essential support to human origins research.

Our grant offerings are mainly split between Paleoanthropology and Primate Behavior, in addition to research into modern hunter-gatherer groups. Here is a full list of our most recently funded grants.

Grant Distribution Pie Chart

We also offer Franklin Mosher Baldwin Memorial Fellowships to provide financial assistance for scholars with citizenship in a developing country who wish to obtain an advanced degree from an institution outside the scholar’s home country. The aim of these fellowships is to support young scholars in developing countries rich in archeological evidence of human evolution who may not otherwise have access to research education and training.

Three easy ways you can support the work of The Leakey Foundation:

A generous donor has pledged to give $1 for every $2 that you donate, ensuring that your contributions will go even farther.

All donations are charitable deductions, and help us directly fund important scientific research into human origins.

posted on October 6th, 2011