Author Topic: Bone Fossils Show Primates Evolved In Trees  (Read 618 times)

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Bone Fossils Show Primates Evolved In Trees
« on: June 04, 2017, 03:43:48 pm »
Bone Fossils Show Primates Evolved In Trees
International Business Times
Elana Glowatz  June 2, 2017



Distant human relatives lived and evolved in trees shortly after the big dinosaurs went extinct, according to an analysis of bones from the earliest known primates.

The bones are 62 million years old and come from a small mammal called the Torrejonia, part of an extinct primate family known as plesiadapiforms that date back to a time only a few million years after non-avian dinosaurs went extinct. Although scientists have believed they lived on the ground and fed on the insects there, based on fossils of their cranium and teeth, a study in the journal  Royal Society Open Science says Torrejonia’s bones, which were found in New Mexico, tell a different story: of an animal climbing and hanging on to tree branches.

“This is the oldest partial skeleton of a plesiadapiform, and it shows that they undoubtedly lived in trees,” lead author Stephen Chester said in a statement from  Yale University. “We now have anatomical evidence from the shoulder, elbow, hip, knee and ankle joints that allows us to assess where these animals lived in a way that was impossible when we only had their teeth and jaws.”

It was the flexibility in those joints that helped scientists determine that the primates hung out in trees, among other skeletal features that were suited for such a lifestyle.

The study says that the clues about ancient primates being tree-dwellers suggests that “primates are primitively arboreal,” as opposed to their tree-climbing ways simply evolving separately among different groups of primates. And the researchers say their analysis confirms the prehistoric plesiadapiforms that Torrejonia called its family were indeed the earliest primates out there.



Scientists analyzed the bones of this extinct prehistoric primate called the Torrejonia to find out that the earliest primates lived in trees. Photo: Yale University


“To find a skeleton like this, even though it appears a little scrappy, is an exciting discovery that brings a lot of new data to bear on the study of the origin and early evolution of primates,” senior author Eric Sargis said in the Yale statement.

There were more than 20 bones in the partial skeleton, including pieces of the skull, limbs, jaw and teeth. Having the teeth there was important because it helped identify the animal, as many ancient specimens are classified based on dental features.

The plesiadapiforms may have been a sort of transition animal, a link between primate ancestors and primates themselves, based on anatomy that is not quite how we understand primates to look. According to Yale, those more primitive features include “outward-facing eyes” and the belief that they “relied on smell more than living primates do today.”

That makes sense given that scientists think primates started to split off the evolutionary tree from other animals about  65 million years ago. They evolved into many  kinds of animal species we know and love today, like humans, chimpanzees, gorillas and lemurs, to name a few.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/bone-fossils-show-primates-evolved-155813631.html

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Re: Bone Fossils Show Primates Evolved In Trees
« Reply #1 on: June 05, 2017, 07:26:41 pm »


Primate?

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Re: Bone Fossils Show Primates Evolved In Trees
« Reply #2 on: June 05, 2017, 09:24:29 pm »
Looks a little like a squirrel with a funny tail, which is what I've always heard about the pre-mates...

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Re: Bone Fossils Show Primates Evolved In Trees
« Reply #3 on: June 06, 2017, 07:43:46 pm »
Thing is they are basing everything off a skeleton that is more than 90% incomplete.  More critically, a species that lacks several characteristics of primates based on the supposition that it should have some others we do not have actual fossil evidence of.  If I really wanted to I could bring up several books arguing whether this (and it's entire line) should be a primate or not. 

Spine and jaw.  Experts are arguing over spine and jaw for it to be a primate, neither of which have good fossil evidence. 


That said, I also can't blame anyone for staring at the supposed skeleton, squinting their eyes, and saying lemur as it's reasonably close.   

 

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