The Sunday Times called him "one of the greatest fossil collectors in South Africa".[5]
Early life
Nyaphuli left school after Grade 7, and moved to Bloemfontein in pursuit of employment. From 1962 to 1967, he worked in food preparation for the South African Defence Force, after which he served as a messenger at the University of the Orange Free State until 1973, when he joined the National Museum as a fossil preparator.[2]
Recognition
In 1992, he was unanimously made an honorary life member of the Palaeontological Society of South Africa,[2] and in 2011, he won the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology's Morris F. Skinner Award.[3]