An Early Miocene anthropoid skull from the Chilean Andes
- 1 February 1995
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 373 (6515) , 603-607
- https://doi.org/10.1038/373603a0
Abstract
Partly because of their poor fossil record, the relationships of neotropical platyrrhine monkeys to other groups of primates and to each other remain perhaps the most poorly known for any major primate clade. Here we report the discovery of a complete platyrrhine skull from the Andes of central Chile, by far the best preserved Tertiary primate cranium from South America. This find, coupled with recent phylogenetic analyses of higher groups of anthropoid primates, has the potential to revise substantially our understanding of platyrrhine interrelationships, indicating, among other points, significant modification to reconstruction of the ancestral platyrrhine morphotype and a likely African origin for New World monkeys. A 40Ar/39Ar radioisotopic date directly associated with the skull indicates an Early Miocene age, marking the first report of South American mammals of this age from outside Argentine Patagonia. Finally, this discovery demonstrates the enormous potential of vastly distributed, but virtually untapped, Andean volcaniclastic deposits to yield further insights into the origin and diversification of South American primates.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- A diverse new primate fauna from middle Eocene fissure-fillings in southeastern ChinaNature, 1994
- Coeval 40 Ar/ 39 Ar Ages of 65.0 Million Years Ago from Chicxulub Crater Melt Rock and Cretaceous-Tertiary Boundary TektitesScience, 1992
- The phyletic relationships of extant and fossil Pitheciinae (Platyrrhini, Anthropoidea)Journal of Human Evolution, 1990
- New fossil platyrrhines from the Pinturas Formation, southern ArgentinaJournal of Human Evolution, 1990
- Evolving climates and mammal faunas in cenozoic South AmericaJournal of Human Evolution, 1990
- The phyletic position of the ParapithecidaeJournal of Human Evolution, 1987
- New Primate Fossils from Late Oligocene (Colhuehuapian) Localities of Chubut Province, ArgentinaFolia Primatologica, 1983
- Allometric scaling in the dentition of primates and prediction of body weight from tooth size in fossilsAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1982
- The ecology of oligocene African anthropoideaInternational Journal of Primatology, 1980
- A New Genus of Late Oligocene Monkey (Cebidae, Platyrrhini) with Notes on Postorbital Closure and Platyrrhine EvolutionFolia Primatologica, 1974