'Remington Kellogg' (
5 October 1892 -
8 May 1969) was an American naturalist and a director of the
United States National Museum.
He was born in
Davenport, Iowa. His parents named him 'Arthur Remington Kellogg' but he quickly dropped the "Arthur". From a young age he devoted his free time to the study of wildlife. He built up his own small collection of mounted birds and mammals and by the time he came to choose a university he had determined he would become a naturalist. Choosing the
University of Kansas as it offered courses in his chosen field, he first studied
entomology, later switching to the study of mammals. From 1913 to 1916 he worked under
Charles D. Bunker, the curator of birds and mammals at the university's Museum of Natural History. He published his first paper as a result of his work with Bunker. Kellogg graduated in 1915 and received his M.A. the following year.
After graduating, he immediately began work with the
United States Bureau of Biological Survey in
Kansas and
North Dakota. At the end of 1915 the Survey paid for him to travel to
Washington, D.C. from where he undertook a tour of the museums of the eastern states. Around this time he decided to specialize in the study of marine mammals and in 1916 enrolled the
University of California at Berkeley where he studied for a Ph.D in
zoology. He was given a teaching fellowship at the behest of
John C. Merriam, and studied fossil
pinnipeds, producing his first important papers on the subject in 1920 and 1921.
He served in the Army in France during
World War I, but still found time to collect specimens which he sent back to Berkeley and the University of Kansas. He was discharged in July 1919 and returned to Berkeley to complete his doctorate, transferring from zoology to study vertebrate
paleontology under Merriam.
In 1921 he became assistant biologist for the Biological Survey based in Washington, and worked there for the next eight years, concerned chiefly with studying
toads and the feeding habits of
hawks and
owls. He also undertook a study to determine whether
alligators were a predatory risk to help resolve controversy over their hunting. Merriam encouraged Kellogg to use his free time to study the fossilized marine mammals of
Calvert Cliffs in
Maryland. He added considerably to the collections created by previous expeditions and used the experience he gained as the basis for his Ph.D thesis, entitled ''The History of Whales - Their Adaptation to Life in the Water'' in which he studied the specializations needed for mammalian organs to adjust to life in water.
In 1928 Kellogg became assistant curator at the United States National Museum and in 1941 became curator. At the museum he devoted time to studying the
Archaeoceti, primitive whales from the
Eocene and early
Oligocene, and the
Miocene Cetacea of North America. In 1948 he was appointed director of the Museum and in 1958 was made assistant secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. He was elected to the
National Academy of Sciences in 1951.
His Ph.D thesis had established him as an authority on cetaceans, and with concern growing over the need to protect whales from over-exploitation, in 1930 he was invited to speak at a conference on whaling held by the
League of Nations. Further conferences followed and Kellogg was appointed as a US delegate to the
International Conference on Whaling held in London in 1937, which resulted in the first protection for whales, the
International Agreement for the Regulation of Whaling. Kellogg was head of the US delegation in two further conferences in 1944 and 1945 and was chairman of the 1946 conference, after which he became the US commissioner on
International Whaling Commission between 1949 and 1967. He served as vice-chairman of the Commission between 1949 and 1951 and chairman between 1952 and 1954.
He retired from his posts at the Smithsonian Institute and National Museum in 1962, but continued to work on his study of Miocene Cetacea, publishing nine papers on fossil marine mammals between 1965 and 1969. Ill-health, coupled with frustration over the lack of progress, forced him to abandon his work with the International Whaling Commission after 1964.
He died of a heart attack at his home in Washington on
8 May 1969 whilst recuperating from a broken pelvis.
References
★
Biographical Memoirs V.46, Frank C. Whitmore, Jr., , , National Academy of Sciences (NAS), ,