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[[Image:William Boyd Dawkins.jpg|thumb|right|William Boyd Dawkins]] |
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'''Professor Sir William Boyd Dawkins, FRS, KBE''' (26 December 1837 – 15 January 1929) was a British [[geologist]] and [[archaeologist]]. He was a member of the [[Geological Survey of Great Britain]], Curator of the [[Manchester Museum]] and Professor of Geology at [[Owens College]], [[Manchester]]. He is noted for his research on [[fossils]] and the antiquity of man. He was involved in many projects including a tunnel under the [[Humber]], a [[Channel Tunnel]] attempt and the proving of coal under [[Kent]]. |
'''Professor Sir William Boyd Dawkins, FRS, KBE''' (26 December 1837 – 15 January 1929) was a British [[geologist]] and [[archaeologist]]. He was a member of the [[Geological Survey of Great Britain]], Curator of the [[Manchester Museum]] and Professor of Geology at [[Owens College]], [[Manchester]]. He is noted for his research on [[fossils]] and the antiquity of man. He was involved in many projects including a tunnel under the [[Humber]], a [[Channel Tunnel]] attempt and the proving of coal under [[Kent]]. |
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Revision as of 12:14, 1 October 2010

Professor Sir William Boyd Dawkins, FRS, KBE (26 December 1837 – 15 January 1929) was a British geologist and archaeologist. He was a member of the Geological Survey of Great Britain, Curator of the Manchester Museum and Professor of Geology at Owens College, Manchester. He is noted for his research on fossils and the antiquity of man. He was involved in many projects including a tunnel under the Humber, a Channel Tunnel attempt and the proving of coal under Kent.
Background
Dawkins was born at Buttington Vicarage in Montgomeryshire on 26 December 1837. He attracted attention at age five by collecting fossils from the local colliery spoil heaps. Soon after this, his family moved to Fleetwood in Lancashire, where he attended Rossall School. He again attracted attention by adding fossils from the local boulder clay to his earlier collection. After leaving school, he attended Jesus College, Oxford graduating with a second in Classics and a first in Natural Sciences.
On leaving Oxford University in 1862, he joined the Geological Survey of Great Britain where he spent the next seven years working on the areas of Kent and the Thames Valley. In 1869, he was elected a member of the Geological Society and appointed Curator of the Manchester Museum, a position he held until 1890. In 1870, he took a further appointment as a lecturer at Owens College, Manchester. eventually becoming the first Professor of Geology in 1874.
Dawkins became involved with the Manchester Geological and Mining Society and was its President on three occasions: 1874–75, 1876–77 and 1886–87. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1867 and acted as President of the Anthropological Section of the British Association in 1882 and the Geological Section in 1888. Dawkins was knighted for "services to geology" in 1919. He died in 1929, aged 91.
Kent
In 1882, following from his work with the Geological Survey, Dawkins was appointed as the official surveyor by the Channel Tunnel Committee. He made a geological survey of the English and French coasts along the Dover and Calais areas, however the project was abandoned due to lack of money.
In 1886, the South Eastern Railway Company approached Dawkins asking him if his Channel Tunnel work has shown any coal under Kent. The finding of coal under Kent would have given the company great financial benefits. Together with Henry Willett and the French geologist Pigou, Dawkins presented a paper in 1887 proving the existence of coal under the Cretaceous deposits of Kent.
Archaeology
Dawkins achieved many distinctions in the field of archaeology. In 1859 he moved to Somerset to study classics with the vicar of Wookey. On hearing of the discovery of bones by local workmen he led excavations in the area of the hyena den at Wookey Hole Caves. He also excavated Aveline's Hole, expanding its entrance and naming it after his mentor William Talbot Aveline.[1] His work led to the discovery of the first evidence for use by Palaeolithic man in the Caves of the Mendip Hills.
He spent a great deal of time researching in Derbyshire, especially at Creswell Crags and Windy Knoll near Castleton. At Windy Knoll (NGR SK126830), he proved the existence of exotic animals that lived in England prior to the ice ages. With Rooke Pennington and J. Tym, he discovered bones from bison, hyena, bear and a large cat, possibly a relative of the Sabre Tooth Tiger. The bison bones were more recently dated at 37 300bp (OxA – 4579). Many of the finds are located in the museums of Buxton, Derbyshire and Manchester.
Philanthropy

Dawkins was a fighter for workers' rights especially in the coal mining industry. He lobbied hard to get a better education system for miners similar to the ones established in Germany. He donated undisclosed amounts of money to this cause.
Among his other donations was one to the Manchester Museum. The museum wanted to build an extension and started an appeal. The appeal raised £1015 2s 9d, of which Dawkins donated £500. Later in life he fought for compensation for people whose homes had been affected by subsidence from the salt mines and workings near Northwich, Cheshire.
Publications
Dawkins published many books and papers, but the best-known are:
- 1866-1939, 1962: British Pleistocene Mammalia. 6 vols. London: Printed for the Palaeontographical Society (co-author with W. Ayshford Sanford, S. H. Reynolds)[2]
- 1874: Cave Hunting. London: Macmillan
- 1875: "The mammalia found at Windy Knoll", in: Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society; 31, pp. 246–55
- 1877: "The exploration of the ossiferous deposits at Windy Knoll, Castleton, Derbyshire", in: Quarterly Journal of the Royal Society of London; 33, pp. 724–29 (with R. Pennington)
- 1877: "On mammal fauna of the caves of Creswell Crags", in: Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society; 33, pp. 589–612
- 1879: "Further discoveries in the Creswell Crags", in: Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society; 35, pp. 724–35 (with J. M. Mello)
- 1880: Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period. London: Macmillan
Footnotes
Sources
- Tweedale, Geoffrey & Procter, Timothy "Catalogue of the Papers of Professor Sir William Boyd Dawkins in the John Rylands University Library of Manchester", in: Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester; vol. 74, no. 2 (1992), pp. 3-36
- Tweedale, Geoffrey & Procter, Timothy (ca. 1990) New Documentary Evidence on the Career of Sir William Boyd Dawkins FRS (1837 – 1929). Manchester: John Rylands Research Institute Scientific Archives Project
- Wood, Kenneth (1987) Rich Seams--the history of the Manchester Geological and Mining Society. Bolton: Manchester Geological and Mining Society ISBN 0 904905 13 6
- Various papers, University of Manchester, John Rylands Library, Deansgate, Manchester
- Various archive papers of the Manchester Geological and Mining Society