- Paul Rivet
Infobox Scientist
name = Paul Rivet
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caption = Paul Rivet
birth_date =7 May 1876
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death_date =25 March 1958
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nationality = French
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field =ethnology
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known_for =Musée de l'Homme Comité de vigilance des intellectuels antifascistes
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Paul Rivet (1876 –1958 ) was a Frenchethnologist , who founded theMusée de l'Homme in 1937. He was also one of the founder of the "Comité de vigilance des intellectuels antifascistes ", an antifascist organization created in the wake of theFebruary 6, 1934 far right riots .Rivet proposed a theory according to which
South America was populated by settlers fromAustralia andMelanesia . Trained as a physician, he took part in the Second French Geodesic Mission toEcuador in 1901. He remained for six years in South America. When he returned to France, he was active with theMuséum national d'Histoire naturelle , directed by René Vernaus.His notes were published along with René Vernaus' notes between 1921 and 1922 under the title "Ancient Ethnography of Ecuador". In 1926, Paul Rivet participated in the establishment of the
Institut d'Ethnologie in Paris, where he taught many French ethnologists. In 1928, he succeeded René Vernaus as director of the National Museum of Natural History.Rivet's theory asserts that
Asia was the cradle of the American man, but also that migrations took place fromAustralia some 6,000 years before, and fromMelanesia somewhat later. "Les Origines de l'Homme Américain" ("The Origins of the American Man") was published in 1943, and contains linguistic and anthropological arguments which support his thesis.In 1942, Paul Rivet went to
Colombia where he founded the Anthropological Institute and Museum. Returning to Paris in 1945, he continued teaching while carrying on his research. His linguistic research introduced several new perspectives on the Aymara andQuechua language s.
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