French scientists dismiss Russian claims
over age of world's oldest person
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[January 09, 2019]
PARIS (Reuters) - Two French
scientists who validated Jeanne Calment's status as the oldest person
ever to have lived, have dismissed claims by Russian researchers who say
that she didn't really survive to 122.
Mathematician Nikolay Zak and gerontologist Valery Novoselov claim that
Calment's daughter, Yvonne Calment, assumed her mother's identity
decades earlier.
The Russians analyzed photographs, official documents and interviews to
produce a body of evidence they acknowledge is circumstantial.
Gerentology is the scientific study of old age.
Jean-Marie Robine, one of the two French scientists who validated
Calment's age, told France Inter radio late on Wednesday that the stir
being caused in France by the Russians' findings was a "ridiculous
controversy".
A spokesman for Guinness World Records, which registered Calment's age
as a world record, said they were aware of the Russians' claims.
"Extensive research is performed for every oldest person record title we
verify, which is led by experts in the gerontology field and they have
been notified of the current situation," a spokesman said.
In a paper for the Moscow Center For Continuous Mathematical Education,
Zak cites discrepancies between the color of Jeanne Calment's eyes, her
height and the shape of her forehead in a copy of a 1930s identity card
and in her appearance later in life.
"I do not have cast-iron proof," Zak told Reuters on a snow-blanketed
street in Moscow. "I reviewed the whole situation. There are lots of
small pieces of evidence."
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The World's oldest woman, Jeanne Calment, 120 years old, is kissed
by two young girls during a special ceremony in a retirement home in
Arles, Southern France, February 21, 1995. REUTERS/Jean-Paul
Pelisser/File Photo
The second French scientist who validated Calment's age,
gerontologist Michel Allard, acknowledged that even if far-fetched,
the Russians' conclusions should be given consideration, although he
rejected their suggestions of discrepancies between early images of
Calment and her appearance in later life.
"In the last years of Jeanne Calment's life, I saw so many
transformations of her physiognomy," he told France Inter.
Jeanne Calment was born on Feb 21, 1875, more than a decade before
the Eiffel Tower was built and a year before Alexander Graham Bell
patented the telephone.
She married a distant wealthy cousin and outlived her daughter
Yvonne -- who died of pneumonia in the early 1930s according to
official documents -- her husband and a grandson before passing away
in Arles, southern France, on Aug 4, 1997.
(Reporting by Richard Lough and Claudia Wyatt in Paris and Dmitriy
Turlyun in Moscow; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Kirsten
Donovan)
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