| Roy Chapman Andrews |
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| CATEGORIES ABOUT ROY CHAPMAN ANDREWS | |
| 1884 births | |
| 1960 deaths | |
| adventurers | |
| american paleontologists | |
| american explorers | |
| people from beloit, wisconsin | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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Andrews is said to have been one of the inspirations for the Fictional Adventurer Indiana Jones . EARLY LIFE AND EDUCATION Andrews was born on January 26, 1884, in Beloit , Wisconsin , at 419 St. Lawrence Avenue. As a child, he explored forests, fields, and waters nearby, developing Marksmanship skills. He taught himself Taxidermy and used funds from this hobby to pay tuition to Beloit College . On March 31, 1905, during his junior year in college, Andrews was boating on the Rock River in bad conditions when his craft capsized; his friend, Monty White, died in the cold waters, but Andrews survived. After graduation the following year, Andrews used some of his money saved from taxidermy to travel to New York City to find a job at the American Museum of Natural History. Told that there were no openings, Andrews took a job as a janitor in the taxidermy department and began collecting specimens for the museum. During the next few years, he worked and studied simultaneously, earning a Master Of Arts Degree in Mammalogy from Columbia University . CAREER From 1909 to 1910, Andrews sailed as on the '' USS Albatros '' to the East Indies , collecting snakes and lizards and observing Marine Mammal s. He married Yvette Borup in 1914. From 1916 to 1917, Andrews and his wife led the Asiatic Zoological Expedition of the museum through much of western and southern Yunnan , as well as other Provinces Of China . The book '' Camps And Trails In China '' records their experiences. In 1920, Andrews began planning for expeditions to Mongolia and drove a fleet of Dodge cars westward from Peking . In 1922, the party discovered a fossil of the '' Baluchitherium '', a gigantic hornless Rhinoceros , which was sent back to the museum, arriving on December 19. On July 13, 1923, the party was the first in the world to discover discovered a skull from the Cretaceous Period . In 1925, the museum sent a letter back informing the party that the skull was that of a mammal, and therefore rare and valuable; more were uncovered. Expeditions in the area stopped during 1926 and 1927. In 1928, the expedition's finds were seized by Chinese authorities but were eventually returned. The 1929 expedition was cancelled. In 1930, he made one final trip and discovered some Mastodon fossils. (Sixty years after Chapman's initial expedition, the American Museum of Natural History returned to Mongolia on the invitation of its government to continue exploration.) Later that year, Champan returned to the United States and divorced his wife, with whom he had two sons. In 1934, Andrews became the director of the museum. In his 1935 book '' The Business Of Exploring '', he wrote "I was born to be an explorer...There was never any decision to make. I couldn't do anything else and be happy." In 1942, Andrews retired to Carmel-by-the-Sea, California , where he wrote about his life and died in 1960. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in his hometown of Beloit. SOURCES
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