Primate postcrania from the late middle Eocene of Myanmar
Open Access
- 3 July 2001
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 98 (14) , 7672-7677
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.051003298
Abstract
Fossil primates have been known from the late middle to late Eocene Pondaung Formation of Myanmar since the description of Pondaungia cotteri in 1927. Three additional primate taxa, Amphipithecus mogaungensis, Bahinia pondaungensis and Myanmarpithecus yarshensis, were subsequently described. These primates are represented mostly by fragmentary dental and cranial remains. Here we describe the first primate postcrania from Myanmar, including a complete left humerus, a fragmentary right humerus, parts of left and right ulnae, and the distal half of a left calcaneum, all representing one individual. We assign this specimen to a large species of Pondaungia based on body size and the known geographic distribution and diversity of Myanmar primates. Body weight estimates of Pondaungia range from 4,000 to 9,000 g, based on humeral length, humeral midshaft diameter, and tooth area by using extant primate regressions. The humerus and ulna indicate that Pondaungia was capable of a wide variety of forelimb movements, with great mobility at the shoulder joint. Morphology of the distal calcaneus indicates that the hind feet were mobile at the transverse tarsal joint. Postcrania of Pondaungia present a mosaic of features, some shared in common with notharctine and adapine adapiforms, some shared with extant lorises and cebids, some shared with fossil anthropoids, and some unique. Overall, Pondaungia humeral and calcaneal morphology is most consistent with that of other known adapiforms. It does not support the inclusion of Pondaungia in Anthropoidea.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- A new anthropoid from the latest middle Eocene of Pondaung, central MyanmarJournal of Human Evolution, 2001
- Siamopithecus eocaenus, a late Eocene anthropoid primate from Thailand: its contribution to the evolution of anthropoids in Southeast AsiaJournal of Human Evolution, 1999
- Foot morphology and evolution in early Eocene CantiusAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1991
- New postcranial specimens of catarrhines from the Middle Miocene Chinji Formation, Pakistan: descriptions and a discussion of proximal humeral functional morphology in anthropoidsJournal of Human Evolution, 1989
- Anthropoid Origins in Asia? New Discovery of Amphipithecus from the Eocene of BurmaScience, 1985
- Postcranium of Adapis parisiensis and Leptadapis magnus (Adapiformes, Primates)Folia Primatologica, 1983
- Skeletal Remains of Propliopithecus chirobates from the Egyptian OligoceneFolia Primatologica, 1982
- Locomotor Adaptations as Reflected on the Humerus of Paleogene PrimatesFolia Primatologica, 1980
- Late Eocene of Burma yields earliest anthropoid primate, Pondaungia cotteriNature, 1979
- Ape Limb Bone from the Oligocene of EgyptScience, 1975