William Curtis Farabee
William Curtis Farabee | |
|---|---|
| Born | February 7, 1865 Washington County, Pennsylvania |
| Died | June 25, 1925 (aged 60) Washington, Pennsylvania |
| Education | Pennsylvania Western University, California, Waynesburg College, Harvard University |
| Known for | Demonstrating Mendelian inheritance in humans; Indian Tribes of Eastern Peru |
| Spouse |
Sylvia Manilla Holdren
(m. 1897) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Physical anthropology, human genetics |
| Thesis | Heredity and Sexual Influences In Meristic Variation: A Study of Digital Malformations in Man |
| Doctoral advisor | William E. Castle |
William Curtis Farabee (1865–1925), the second individual to obtain a doctorate in physical anthropology from Harvard University, engaged in a wide range of anthropological work during his time as a professor at Harvard and then as a researcher at the University Museum, Philadelphia, but is best known for his work in human genetics and his ethnographic and geographic work in South America.