Biography

 

Keaghan Yaxley

Keaghan Yaxley

  • Alumni
  • Australia
  • 2018 PhD Biological Anthropology
  • King's College

I grew up in Canberra, Australia’s capital - rich in both wilderness and politics - so it’s unsurprising that I became interested in both. I completed my B.Sc. in Zoology at the Australian National University, investigating how evolutionary history can be used to inform conservation planning. While studying, I worked for federal Labor Senator Kate Lundy. My time in politics included work in government, a federal election campaign, and a subsequent stint in opposition, after which I returned to research. Currently, I am using evolutionary models to reconstruct the last common ancestor of the African apes (gorillas, bonobos, chimpanzees and humans of course) to complete my MPhil in Human Evolutionary Studies at the University of Cambridge. My PhD will see me examine the evolution of African mammals over the last five million years, looking for innovative adaptations that allowed species to occupy new environments. This work will help to shed light on the processes that drove the evolution of form in mammals. I hope to combine the opportunities afforded by Gates Cambridge and the skills I gained working in politics to become a scientific communicator and an advocate for higher eduction and research.

Previous Education

Australian National University
University of Cambridge