Wade Davis(I)
- Writer
- Additional Crew
- Actor
Anthropologist and botanical explorer Wade Davis received his Ph.D. in
ethnobotany from Harvard University. Mostly through the Harvard
Botanical Museum, he spent more than three years in the Amazon and
Andes as a plant explorer, living among 15 indigenous groups in eight
Latin American nations while making some 6,000 botanical collections.
Davis's work later took him to Haiti to investigate folk preparations
implicated in the creation of zombies, an assignment that led to his
writing Passage of Darkness (1988) and The Serpent and the Rainbow
(1986), an international best-seller, which appeared in 10 languages
and was later released by Universal Studios as a motion picture. He is
author of five other books, including Shadows in the Sun (1998) and One
River (1996). Born December 14, 1953, in British Columbia, Davis is a
citizen of both Canada and Ireland. He has worked as a guide, park
ranger and forestry engineer. He has conducted ethnographic fieldwork
among several indigenous societies of northern Canada. He has published
scientific and popular articles on subjects ranging from Haitian voodoo
and Amazonian myth and religion to the global biodiversity crisis, the
traditional use of psychotropic drugs, and the ethnobotany of South
American Indians. His photographs have been published widely. Recently
Davis's work has taken him to Peru, Borneo, Tibet, the high Arctic, the
Orinoco Delta of Venezuela and northern Kenya. A research associate of
the Institute of Economic Botany of the New York Botanical Garden, he
also is a board member of the David Suzuki Foundation, Ecotrust, Future
Generations, and Cultural Survival-all NGOs dedicated to
conservation-based development and the protection of cultural and
biological diversity. Davis's television credits include Earthguide, a
13-part television series on the environment, which he hosted and
co-wrote. He also wrote for the documentaries Spirit of the Mask, Cry
of the Forgotten People, and Forests Forever.