New fossils add to primate-origins debate. (Fine Toothcomb).Fossil hunters working in Egypt have unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. jaw fragments and teeth belonging to the oldest known members of one of the main evolutionary branches of primates Primates The mammalian order to which humans belong. Primates are generally arboreal mammals with a geographic distribution largely restricted to the Tropics. . The 40-million-year-old specimens represent two ancient groups, one an ancestor of modern lorises--complete with a comb-like set of lower front teeth that confirms its identity--and the other, of bushbabies, say anthropologist Erik R. Seiffert of Duke University in Durham, N.C., and his colleagues. These new finds double the age of the sparse fossil record for lorises and bushbabies, which with lemurs make up a primate group called the strepsirrhines. It originated in Africa at least 50 million years ago, the scientists conclude in the March 27 Nature. "The new fossils date to near the evolutionary split of lorises and bushbabies from lemurs, which occurred perhaps 45 million years ago," Seiffert says. Such estimates fit with the traditional notion that the first primates appeared around 65 million years ago. However, other researchers using DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. analyses have concluded that primates arose approximately 90 million years ago (SN: 4/20/02, p. 243). In a comment published with the new report, Robert D. Martin of the Field Museum in Chicago cites the genetic data in support of his view that strepsirrhines originated in southern Asia around 80 million years ago. In his view, lorises and bushbabies took a unique evolutionary route 10 million years later, perhaps when lemurs became isolated on the island of Madagascar after it separated from India. "The timing and location of primate origins remains a complex problem," cautions evolutionary biologist Anne D. Yoder of Yale University Yale University, at New Haven, Conn.; coeducational. Chartered as a collegiate school for men in 1701 largely as a result of the efforts of James Pierpont, it opened at Killingworth (now Clinton) in 1702, moved (1707) to Saybrook (now Old Saybrook), and in 1716 was , who has conducted primate-DNA studies. "Still, the new fossils from Egypt are terribly exciting." Seiffert's group excavated a site in the Fayum Depression on the eastern edge of the Sahara Desert. They assign some of their finds to the genus Saharagalago, an ancestor of living bushbabies that weighed around 1/4 pound. The rest come from the genus Karanisia, an ancient loris loris, name for slow-moving, nocturnal, arboreal primates of the family Lorisidae, found in India, Sri Lanka, and SE Asia. Lorises have round heads, large round eyes, and furry bodies. They have no tails, and their index fingers are vestigial. that tipped the scales at an estimated 2/3 pound. Of particular interest, the researchers say, are teeth at the front of a Karanisia lower-jaw fragment that form a toothcomb like that of today's strepsirrhines. The toothcomb consists of elongated e·lon·gate tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates To make or grow longer. adj. or elongated 1. Made longer; extended. 2. Having more length than width; slender. , flattened flat·ten v. flat·tened, flat·ten·ing, flat·tens v.tr. 1. To make flat or flatter. 2. To knock down; lay low: The boxer was flattened with one punch. teeth that angle sharply forward. Microscopic grooves on the fossil teeth indicate that Karanisia used its toothcomb for grooming, just as its living relatives do, Seiffert says. Despite an intriguing find in Pakistan several years ago, no definitive lemur lemur (lē`mər), name for prosimians, or lower primates, of two related families, found only on Madagascar and adjacent islands. Lemurs have monkeylike bodies and limbs, and most have bushy tails about as long as the body. fossils have been found, Martin holds (SN: 10/20/01, p. 245). "We need to find lemur fossils [at Fayum]," Seiffert says. Without such a find, he notes, fossil reconstructions of primate origin will remain shaky. |
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