Camille Arambourg

Arambourg in about 1940 Camille Arambourg ( February 3, 1885– November 19, 1969) was a French vertebrate paleontologist. He conducted extensive field work in North Africa. In the 1950s he argued against the prevailing model of Neanderthals as brutish and simian. During World War I he was in Military service. After that he was a professor of Geology at the Institut Agricole d'Alger, and after that a professor of Paleontology at Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, where he succeeded his teacher Marcellin Boule. The pterosaur ''Arambourgiania'' is named after him. He was President of the PanAfrican Archaeological Association from 1959 to 1963. Provided by Wikipedia
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Participants: Arambourg, Camille [ MitwirkendeR ]
Published: 1963
Superior document: Le gisement de Ternifine 1(1963)
Other Authors: ...Arambourg, Camille...