We discover that two sets of teeth in Africa and in Burma that are
contemporaneous and closely related and now we know that the
progenitors of the primates made it to Africa around 40,000,000 years
go plus or minus a couple of million years. It is also good news
when we can lock down a benchmark in geological time. Now we can say
before and after with some authority and little else of course, but
that is useful.
We are steadily discovering fossils for the multiple lines of
primates that arose and in due time the lines of hominids. I do not
think that such work is yet complete although it probably is in terms
of the salient hominids that we are going to locate.
This work describes the process rather well and what it entails.
Little glamor here.
Fossil discovery
sheds new light on evolutionary history of higher primates
by Staff Writers
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Jun 07, 2012
Researchers have
discovered remains of an anthropoid primate, now named Afrasia
djijidae, in Myanmar. Here a reconstruction of the small primate,
which probably weighed about 3.5 ounces. Image courtesy Marc Klinger.
An international team of researchers has announced the discovery
of Afrasia djijidae, a new fossil primate from Myanmar that
illuminates a critical step in the evolution of early anthropoids-the
group that includes humans, apes, and monkeys.
The
37-million-year-old Afrasia closely resembles another early
anthropoid, Afrotarsius libycus, recently discovered at a site of
similar age in the Sahara Desert of Libya. The close similarity
between Afrasia and Afrotarsius indicates that early anthropoids
colonized Africa only shortly before the time when these animals
lived.
The colonization of
Africa by early anthropoids was a pivotal step in primate and human
evolution, because it set the stage for the later evolution of more
advanced apes and humans there. The scientific paper describing the
discovery appears in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
For decades, scientists thought that anthropoid evolution was
rooted in Africa. However, more recent fossil discoveries in China,
Myanmar, and other Asian countries have rapidly altered scientific
opinion about where this group of distant human
ancestors first evolved.
Afrasia is the latest in a series of fossil discoveries that are
overturning the concept of Africa as the starting point for
anthropoid primate evolution.
"Not only does Afrasia help seal the case that anthropoids
first evolved in Asia, it also tells us when our anthropoid ancestors
first made their way to Africa, where they continued to evolve into
apes and humans," says Chris Beard, Carnegie
Museum of Natural History
paleontologist and member of the discovery team that also included
researchers from Myanmar, Thailand, and France. Beard is renowned for
his extensive work on primate evolution and anthropoid origins.
"Afrasia is a
game-changer because for the first time it signals when our distant
ancestors initially colonized Africa. If this ancient migration had
never taken place, we wouldn't be here talking about it."
Timing is
everything
Paleontologists have been divided over exactly how and when early Asian anthropoids made their way from Asia to Africa. The trip could not have been easy, because a more extensive version of the modern Mediterranean Sea called the Tethys Sea separated Africa from Eurasia at that time.
While the discovery
of Afrasia does not solve the exact route early anthropoids followed
in reaching Africa, it does suggest that the colonization event
occurred relatively recently, only shortly before the first
anthropoid fossils are found in the African fossil record.
Myanmar's
37-million-year-old Afrasia is remarkable in that its teeth closely
resemble those of Afrotarsius libycus, a North African primate dating
to about the same time. The four known teeth of Afrasia were
recovered after six years of sifting through tons of sediment near
Nyaungpinle in central Myanmar.
This locality occurs
in the middle Eocene Pondaung Formation, where the same international
research team discovered Ganlea megacanina, an influential fossil
described in 2009 that helped solidify the presence of early
anthropoid primates in Asia.
Details of tooth
shape in the Asian Afrasia and the North African Afrotarsius fossils
indicate that these animals probably ate insects. The size of their
teeth suggests that in life these animals weighed around 3.5 ounces
(100 g), roughly the size of a modern tarsier.
Because of the
complicated structure of mammalian teeth, paleontologists often use
them as fingerprints to reconstruct how extinct species are related
to each other and their modern relatives.
These similarities
provide strong evidence that Afrasia's Asian cousins colonized North
Africa only shortly before the appearance of Afrotarsius in the
African fossil record. If Asian anthropoids had arrived in North
Africa earlier, there would have been time for more differences to
evolve between Afrasia and Afrotarsius.
The close similarity
in age and anatomy shared by the two species makes Afrasia a
touchstone in the quest to date the spread of anthropoid primates
from Asia to Africa.
"For years we thought the African fossil record was simply
bad," says Professor Jean-Jacques Jaeger of the University of
Poitiers in France, the team leader and a Carnegie Museum research
associate. "The fact that such similar anthropoids lived at the
same time in Myanmar and Libya suggests that the gap in early African
anthropoid evolution is actually real. Anthropoids didn't arrive in
Africa until right before
we find their fossils in Libya."
Implications for
future research
The search for the origin of early anthropoids-and, by extension, early human ancestors-is a focal point of modern paleoanthropology. The discovery of Afrasia shows that one lineage of early anthropoids colonized Africa around 37?? million years ago, but the diversity of early anthropoids known from the Libyan site that produced Afrotarsius libycus hints that the true picture was more complicated.
These other Libyan
fossil anthropoids may be the descendants of one or more additional
Asian colonists, because they don't appear to be specially related to
Afrasia and Afrotarsius.
Fossil evidence of
evolutionary divergence-when a species divides to create new
lineages-is critical data for researchers in evolution. The
groundbreaking discovery of the relationship between Asia's Afrasia
and North Africa's Afrotarsius is an important benchmark for
pinpointing the date at which Asian anthropoids colonized Africa.
"Groundbreaking research like this underscores the vitality
of modern natural history museums," says Sam Taylor, director of
Carnegie
Museum of Natural History.
"Research like this can only be sustained by the irreplaceable
collections, curatorial expertise, and scientific infrastructure that
natural history museums provide. At the same time, cutting-edge
science like this revitalizes our museum's educational programs and
propels its mission."
"Reconstructing
events like the colonization of Africa by early anthropoids is a lot
like solving a very cold case file," says Beard. "Afrasia
may not be the anthropoid who actually committed the act, but it is
definitely on our short list of prime suspects."
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