Alexander Low, 1868 - 1950, Regius Professor of Anatomy, University of Aberdeen

Alexander Low was born in Old Machar, Aberdeen, on 7 Apr 1868. He graduated from the University of Aberdeen MA 1891, M.B., C.M. 1894, MD (highest honours), 1912, and received an honorary LL.D. in 1939. He began working for the University in 1894 as assistant and lecturer in the Department of Anatomy, rising to the post of Regius Professor of Anatomy, 1925 - 1939. His early work here, on the development of the lower jaw earned him an international reputation, which was strengthened by later anthropological research, in particular his detailed and meticulous work on human growth. His first work in this field, a study of 450 male and 450 female infants measured at birth, was published in The Annals of Eugenics (1950). This was followed by the post-humous publication of Growth of Children: sixty-six boys and sixty girls each measured at three days, and at one, two, three, four and five years of age (Aberdeen: University of Aberdeen, 1952), the result of research which was undertaken between 1923 and 1927, under the auspices of the Aberdeen Growth Study.

An active member of the medical community, Low served as president of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland, president of the Aberdeen Medico-Chirurgical Society, director of Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, and Governor of the Royal Mental Hospital, Aberdeen. He was also a University member on the Board of the Rowett Institute for Research in Animal Nutrition, and dean of the Medical Faculty, University of Aberdeen. His particular interest in archaeological skeletal remains contributed towards strengthening the scope and quality of such collections held in the University's Anthropological Museum (now Marischal Museum). He died in Aberdeen on 15 Nov 1950.

...

Publication Date Publishing Account Status Note View

2016-08-15 11:08:59 pm

System Service

published

Details HRT Changes Compare

2016-08-15 11:08:59 pm

System Service

ingest cpf

Initial ingest from EAC-CPF

Pre-Production Data