Wilhelm Kattwinkel

William Kattwinkel (27 March 1866, Kierspe 21 January 1935, Partenkirchen) was a German neurologist and paleontologist. He was particularly known for the discovery of the fossil deposit in the Olduvai Gorge, which in the following years delivered many findings of hominins.

Life

The son of the merchant William Kattwinkel (died 1877) and Henriette Kattwinkel, born Bancklotz (1833–1898) studied science in Bonn and Strasbourg, from 1894, medicine in Bonn, Königsberg and Erlangen.[1] He received his Ph.D. in 1892 and obtained an MD in 1894 in Munich. In 1895 he married in Schwelm Martha (born 1872), daughter of the factory owner Julius Schmidt.

After his military service Kattwinkel was a volunteer assistant to Hugo von Ziemssen and a guest student from 1900 to 1905 at Hôpital Salpêtrière and the Bicêtre in Paris. In 1902 he qualified as a professor in Munich, in 1909 was appointed Associate Professor of Neurology and earned passing knowledge of paleontology, especially in the German Society for Anthropology, Ethnology and Prehistory by Karl Alfred von Zittel and Johannes Ranke.

From 1910-1911 Kattwinkel undertook with his wife a privately funded research trip to German East Africa to investigate the sleeping sickness[2] In 1911 he discovered on the southeastern edge of today's Serengeti National Park a rich fossil-finding site that he named Olduvai Gorge after the Maasai word for sisal Sansevieria ehrenbergii and Sansevieria suffruticosa. It was subsequently supported by a further expedition of the Geological Institute of Munich and Berlin led by Ernst Freiherr Stromer von Reichenbach (Munich), August Rothpletz (1853-1918, Munich) and Wilhelm von Branca (Berlin). In 1913, under the direction of geologist Hans Reck, the expedition found the first fossils of hominins. This was followed by a further expedition in 1914 funded by Kattwinkel himself. By the outbreak of World War I the previously described expedition of WB Sattler and G. Schulze were interned. Kattwinkel withdrew funding and never visited the Olduvai Gorge again.

Kattwinkel launched a military hospital until 1918 and then took up teaching in Munich again in the course catalogs of Ludwig-Maximilians-University until the winter semester of 1934/35 as not associate professor of internal medicine and neurology.[3] Since the 1920s, he also worked as a doctor at "Wiggers Sanatorium" in Partenkirchen.

Trivia

Louis Leakey, who was especially known for his discoveries in the Olduvai Gorge, falsely labeled William Kattwinkel as a "butterfly collector" who accidentally unearthed the fossils deposit.[4] His misrepresentation was taken up in subsequent literature.

Works

References

  1. Glowatzki G: Kattwinkel. In: New German Biography Oxford University Press, Berlin 1977. Seiten 331–332.
  2. Maier G: African Dinosaurs Unearthed: The Tendaguru Expeditions'. 'Indiana University Press 2003rd ISBN 978-0253342140
  3. 819/1/vvz_lmu_1934-35_wise.pdf course catalog of the University of Munich 1934/35
  4. Glowatzki G (1979).: Wilhelm Kattwinkel, the discoverer of the Olduvai Gorge in. Homo - Journal of the comparative research of people, Volume 30, pp. 124-125
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