Randy Thornhill
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December 7, 1944
- A Natural History of Rape
- The Evolution of Insect Mating Systems
- Nancy Thornhill (divorced)
- Joy Thornhill (divorced)
Randy Thornhill | |
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| Born | Albert Randolph Thornhill December 7, 1944 Decatur, Alabama, United States |
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| Awards | Humboldt Prize (1989)[1] |
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| Thesis | Evolutionary Ecology of the Mecoptera (Insecta) (1974) |
| Website | biology |
Randy Thornhill (born 1944) is an American entomologist and evolutionary biologist. He is a professor of biology at the University of New Mexico, and was president of the Human Behavior and Evolution Society from 2011 to 2013.[2] He is known for his evolutionary explanation of rape as well as his work on insect mating systems and the parasite-stress theory.[3]
Thornhill was born in Alabama in 1944.[4] When he was 12, his mother introduced him to Charles Darwin's The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, which encouraged his later interest in human evolution.[5]
He received a BS in Zoology from Auburn University in 1968, an MS in entomology from Auburn University in 1970, and a PhD in Zoology from the University of Michigan in 1974. His doctoral thesis discussed the evolutionary ecology of Mecoptera insects.[6] He was formerly married to fellow researcher Nancy Thornhill.[7]