Shiva Balak Misra (born 1 March 1940) is an Indian geologist, educator, and rural reformer best known for discovering Fractofusus misrai, one of the worldâÂÂs oldest known multicellular life forms, at Mistaken Point, Newfoundland, Canada. He later returned to India, where he founded Bharatiya Gramin Vidyalaya, a pioneering rural school near Lucknow, and became an influential figure in grassroots education and community development.
Misra was born in Karua village, Barabanki, United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh), to Balbhadra Prasad Misra. As a child, he walked 12 km each day to the nearest school, an experience that shaped his lifelong mission to establish educational opportunities in rural India.
He completed his M.Sc. in Geology from the University of Lucknow, and later earned an M.S. in Geology from the Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada, on a research scholarship. MisraâÂÂs thesis, completed in 1969, mapped and described the Avalon Peninsula, where he made his fossil discovery.
In 1967, while conducting field research at Mistaken Point, Newfoundland, Misra discovered fossil imprints of soft-bodied organisms dating back 565 million years. These fossils, later named Fractofusus misrai in his honor (2007), provided the earliest credible evidence of multicellular life on Earth.
His findings were published in Nature (1968, 1969) and the Bulletin of the Geological Society of America (1969), and continue to be cited in evolutionary biology and paleontology.
The discovery site was declared the Mistaken Point Ecological Reserve in 1984 and recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016.
Upon returning to India, Misra worked with the Geological Survey of India and later as Professor of Geology at Kumaun University (1978âÂÂ1998), where he also served as Dean of the Faculty of Science (1992).
His research on the Precambrian Krol Group of the Nainital region advanced knowledge of stromatolites, depositional environments, and microbial life of the early biosphere. He also discovered copper ore occurrences in Madhya Pradesh, contributing significantly to IndiaâÂÂs mineral exploration database.
In 1972, Misra and his wife, Nirmala Misra, founded Bharatiya Gramin Vidyalaya (BGV) in Kunaura, Lucknow district, using their personal land and resources. Starting as a thatched hut, the school grew into a model of holistic rural education, integrating academic learning with vocational training, womenâÂÂs empowerment, and digital readiness.
BGV initiatives include:
The school has educated thousands of first-generation learners, particularly girls and children from marginalized communities, and produced alumni working as teachers, engineers, and civil servants.
MisraâÂÂs life bridges two worlds â the scientific frontier of paleontology and the grassroots struggle for rural education. His discovery at Mistaken Point reshaped global understanding of early life, while Bharatiya Gramin Vidyalaya continues to empower generations of rural children.
He currently lives at Bharatiya Gramin Vidyalaya, the school he founded in Lucknow. His eldest son is journalist and storyteller Neelesh Misra, while his younger son Shailesh Misra is a software professional.