, a member of the
Stegosauria, found in the
Tendaguru Formation (
Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin) Reck studied at
University College London, then became a private lecturer at the Museum of Natural History. He married Ina von Grumbkow in February 1912. She was considerably older than him, having been born in September 1872, and was a strong and capable woman. The Recks were assigned to follow up the 1911 expedition that had made a large collection of fossils at
Tendaguru in
German East Africa (now Tanzania). They reached Tendaguru in June 1912, rebuilt the camp and quickly settled into a routine of quarrying to collect dinosaur bones, helped by a large workforce of local people. Great quantities of rubble were excavated to uncover the bones, which lay about below the surface. These included the well-preserved skeletons of two
stegosaurs, an armor-plated dinosaur. , which Reck climbed in 1913 Reck found an early Iron Age site at
Engaruka, where a stream from the
Ngorongoro highlands plunges down the western wall of the
Gregory Rift at a point between
Lake Natron and
Lake Manyara, and published a description in 1913. Also in 1913, Reck made an ascent of the
Ol Doinyo Lengai volcano in the
Gregory Rift, about south of
Lake Natron. He was the third geologist to do so.
Ol Doinyo Lengai is the only active carbonatite volcano in the world. In 1914 Reck published a comprehensive report that summarized all that was known about this volcano so far, from his and earlier expeditions. It described the geographic position of the volcano, history of explorations, geomorphological studies and gave a detailed account of the crater region, accompanied by photographs. 2011 In 1911
Wilhelm Kattwinkel, a German
neurologist and
paleontologist, had found interesting fossils in a ravine on the borders of the Serengeti Plains which turned out to contain the remains of a prehistoric three-toed horse. He gave the site the name "Oldoway", later to be changed by the British to
Olduvai. In October 1913 Reck managed to find the site again, despite vague directions. He spent the next few months making a geological survey and collecting over 1,700 fossils. The site was unusual in being made of distinctive layers of different-colored lavas and ash. Although there was no way at that time to accurately date the layers, they did indicate the relative age of the deposits. In December 1913 one of the workmen found a bone protruding from one of the oldest layers, Bed II, at a level where extinct animals from the
Pleistocene had been found. He started to excavate, then told Reck of his find. Reck directed the excavation. The workers used hammers and chisels to excavate a human skeleton with modern anatomy that was embedded in a block of
sedimentary rock. Reck examined the surrounding rocks carefully, but found no sign of disturbance that could indicate a burial at some later data. Reck took the skull back to Berlin in March 1914, and published an article in which he speculated that the skeleton was of a man from 150,000 years ago, far earlier than had been previously considered for the origin of man. The announcement caused a considerable stir, although many people dismissed Reck's claims, saying it must be a recent burial. ==World War I==