Significance of primate petrosal from Middle Eocene fissure-fillings at Shanghuang, Jiangsu Province, People's Republic of China

被引:28
|
作者
MacPhee, RDE
Beard, KC
Qi, T
机构
[1] CARNEGIE MUSEUM NAT HIST, SECT VERTEBRATE PALEONTOL, PITTSBURGH, PA 15213 USA
[2] ACAD SINICA, INST VERTEBRATE PALEONTOL & PALEOANTHROPOL, BEIJING 100044, PEOPLES R CHINA
关键词
Anthropoidea; Eosimiidae; Omomyidae; paleoprimatology;
D O I
10.1006/jhev.1995.1073
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
An isolated petrosal bone belonging to a diminutive primate is reported from Middle Eocene fissure-fills near Shanghuang (southern Jiangsu Province, People's Republic of China), the type locality of several newly described primates (Eosimias sinensis, a basal anthropoid; Adapoids troglodytes, a basal adapinan; Tarsius eocaenus, a congener of extant tarsiers; and Macrotarsius macrorhysis, the first Asian representative of an other exclusively North American genus). Because of its fragmentary condition and unique combination of characters, the Shaughuang petrosal cannot be assigned unambiguously to any of the Shanghuang primate taxa known from dental remains. However, the possibility that the petrosal represents either an adapid or a tarsiid can be dismissed because it lacks defining basicranial apomorphies of these groups. By contrast the element does present arterial features consistent with its being haplorhine. Deciding between the likeliest candidates for its allocation-Omomyidae and Eosimiidea-is difficult, in part because it is not known what (or even whether) basicranial characters can be used to distinguish these clades. If Shanghuang petrosal is that of an eosimiid, as both direct and indirect evidence appears to indicate, the following implications emerge: (1) as long suspected on other grounds, anthropoids share a closer evolutionary history with Omomyidae (and Tarsiiformes) than they do with Adapidae (and Strepsirhini); (2) the specialised basicranial anatomy of extant anthropoids and their immediate cladistic relatives is derived from a primitive precursor whose otic morpholgy was like that of omomyids in moss known respects; (3) the evolution of the defining dental and basicranial apomorphies of extant Anthropoidea has been distinctly mosaic in pattern. (C) 1995 Academic Press Limited.
引用
收藏
页码:501 / 513
页数:13
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