Recent discoveries of Dryopithecus shed new light on evolution of great apes
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 365 (6446) , 543-545
- https://doi.org/10.1038/365543a0
Abstract
The origin and early evolution of the great ape/human clade (Hominidae) is currently a subject of debate. The controversy is fuelled by the fragmentary nature of the fossils which renders it difficult to determine clearly derived features that permit the recognition of fossil members of this clade. We report here the recent discovery of a facial skeleton and a temporal fragment with the petrosal bone of Dryopithecus laietanus, which provides a way out of an impasse. The lack of the fossa subarcuata is a great ape and human clade synapomorphy, and proves unequivocally that Dryopithecus belongs to this clade. The zygomatic possesses derived characters which reveal that Dryopithecus is related to the Ponginae and not to the African apes/humans, as recently suggested. The remaining morphological features are plesiomorphic and thus provide a good model of a common ancestor of all Hominidae.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evolution and environment in the HominoideaNature, 1992
- Second gorilla or third chimp?Nature, 1992
- Testing hominoid phylogeny with the PHYLIP programsJournal of Human Evolution, 1991
- New Sivapithecus humeri from Pakistan and the relationship of Sivapithecus and PongoNature, 1990
- Lufengpithecus and its potential relationship to an orang-utan cladeJournal of Human Evolution, 1990
- New hominid skull material from the late Miocene of Macedonia in Northern GreeceNature, 1990
- The relationships of Sivapithecus and Ramapithecus and the evolution of the orang-utanNature, 1982
- Preliminary Revision of the Dryopithecinae (Pongidae, Anthropoidea)Folia Primatologica, 1965