We often mourn actors and musicians, but some heroes deserve equal recognition — Iain Douglas-Hamilton was one of them. The pioneering elephant conservationist has died at age 83 in Nairobi.
Douglas-Hamilton wasn’t just a zoologist — he was the first to show the world that elephants think, feel, grieve, and make decisions. His groundbreaking research in Tanzania in the 1960s laid the foundation for modern elephant conservation.
His aerial surveys later exposed the devastating ivory crisis, helping lead to the 1989 global ban on the international ivory trade. Prince William called him “a man who dedicated his life to conservation,” while others hailed him as a true legend.
In 1993, he founded Save the Elephants and pioneered GPS tracking, changing how the world protects these animals. His work influenced global policies — including agreements between the U.S. and China to restrict ivory trading.
Survived by his family, his greatest legacy lives on in the thousands of elephants whose future he helped secure. His lifelong message was simple: humans and wildlife must learn to coexist.