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Farish Alston Jenkins (May 19, 1940 – November 11, 2012) was a professor at Harvard University who studied and taught . His discoveries included a transitional creature with characteristics of both fish and land animals, , and one of the earliest known frogs, .


Early life
Farish Jenkins was born in Manhattan on May 19, 1940. He was the oldest of three sons of a marketing executive but was raised by his grandmother in while his father served in World War II.

Jenkins studied geology at Princeton, where he met his wife Eleanor Tracy. He served in the United States Marine Corps for four years, where he became a captain.

After arriving to Yale in 1964 to continue his studies in , Jenkins took a trip to where he is said to have taken his first interest in live animal research: "At the time, in the bush were as thick as rats in a dump. With my camera set on self-timer, I managed to pose with one before the beast came on with a charge. I barely made it back to my in time, lost a lens cap on the way, but became, as a result of those three weeks, as much intrigued by living vertebrates as by their extinct relatives."

He obtained his masters and doctorate from Yale and was the school's first graduate student to enroll in courses at the medical school, studying anatomy and embryology.


Academic career
Jenkins went on to teach at both Columbia and Harvard. In his later life, Jenkins served at Harvard as a professor of biology, the Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology and curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology.

Jenkins made numerous expeditions to the , including a dozen expeditions to the of in Greenland, and to other sites from East Africa to Wyoming. He is credited as having helped explain the fish-to-tetrapod evolutionary transition as he helped discover the 375 million year old Tiktaalik roseae. His trips were subsidized by an anonymous benefactor named Rose and were so strenuous that a colleague of 30 years, , called them "pure Calvinist".

In 1981 he discovered a pile of four frog-like skeletons in the Arizona desert, which initially looked like road kill, and with Neil Shubin he studied the fossils for 14 years. They were eventually described as the early frog . In 2008, he analyzed fossils from Greenland of , an early amphibian from about 210 million years ago that used its upper jaw to open its mouth. Jenkins called it the "ugliest animal in the world".

Jenkins was known for his eccentricity as a professor. When lecturing on the subject of gait, he would illustrate this by walking on a as the character Captain Ahab from Herman Melville's Moby Dick. He was known for taking front row students' shoes in order to examine their wear patterns. On expeditions he dressed in the dashing style of Indiana Jones, donning a Czechoslovak rabbit fur hat and carrying a gun and a flask of vodka. He was known to set up systems of wires and automatic rifles to deter polar bears.

He used to take internal pictures of animals moving in various ways. These could be quite elaborate and exciting, using treadmills and a . " ricocheted across my bookshelves and desk," he reminisced.

He helped to remove from the office of Harvard president.


Personal life
At Princeton, Jenkins drove a fellow student, Eleanor Tracy, to a train station more than an hour away. They dated during college and through his military service, and starting in the mid 1970s they lived on an apple orchard in . They had a son and a daughter.

Jenkins was known for his foul language. He made homemade cider from apples he grew and trapped that disrupted his barn. After being diagnosed with , he said "as a paleontologist, I'm familiar with extinction." He died from at Brigham and Women's Hospital on November 11, 2012.

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