作者
Erik R Seiffert, Jonathan MG Perry, Elwyn L Simons, Doug M Boyer
发表日期
2009/10/22
期刊
Nature
卷号
461
期号
7267
页码范围
1118-1121
出版商
Nature Publishing Group UK
简介
Adapiform or ‘adapoid’ primates first appear in the fossil record in the earliest Eocene epoch (∼55 million years (Myr) ago), and were common components of Palaeogene primate communities in Europe, Asia and North America. Adapiforms are commonly referred to as the ‘lemur-like’ primates of the Eocene epoch, and recent phylogenetic analyses have placed adapiforms as stem members of Strepsirrhini,,, a primate suborder whose crown clade includes lemurs, lorises and galagos. An alternative view is that adapiforms are stem anthropoids. This debate has recently been rekindled by the description of a largely complete skeleton of the adapiform Darwinius, from the middle Eocene of Europe, which has been widely publicised as an important ‘link’ in the early evolution of Anthropoidea. Here we describe the complete dentition and jaw of a large-bodied adapiform (Afradapis gen. nov.) from the earliest late …
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