1 / 19

Chapter 8

Chapter 8. Primate and Hominin Origins. Ancestor to Primates?. What is ancestral to all the critters under the Order Primates ? Where all the humans, australopithicines, monkeys, apes, homo habilis, tarsiers, lorises, aye-ayes, Neandertals, etc. came from…. Primates Review. Me too!.

neva
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 8

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 8 Primate and Hominin Origins

  2. Ancestor to Primates? What is ancestral to all the critters under the Order Primates? Where all the humans, australopithicines, monkeys, apes, homo habilis, tarsiers, lorises, aye-ayes, Neandertals, etc. came from…

  3. Primates Review Me too! *Go back to the chart on pg. 129

  4. The end of the Cretaceous period 65.5 mya Millions of years ago right after the dinosaurs died…

  5. Paleocene 65 myaPlacental mammal radiation • Earliest primates

  6. Eocene 55-35mya More than 200 recognized fossil primate species.

  7. Eocene 55-35 mya Darwinius, from the Messel site in Germany, discovered in 2009 and dates to ~47 mya. More than 200 recognized fossil species.

  8. Eocene Primates Foramen magnum position = whether the body is habitually horizontal (like a horse) or vertical (like a monkey).  During the Eocene, the foramen magnum in some primate species was beginning to move from the back of the skull towards the center. Suggesting…Holding their bodies erect while hopping and sitting, like modern lemurs, galagos, and tarsiers.

  9. Oligocene “Rafting” Africa-> South America ~34 mya early in the Oligocene By this early point in the Oligocene, continental drift had separated the New World from the Old World. New and Old World monkeys branch off here, 35 million years ago.

  10. Oligocene Approximate position of the continents during the beginning of the Oligocene

  11. Oligocene Primates from Fayum Walking with the Beasts (BBC) “Whale Killer” • Apidium • Primitive dental arrangement suggests near or before evolutionary divergence of Old and New World anthropoids • Small, squirrel-like fruit and seed eating, adept at leaping and springing

  12. Egypt’s Fayum Today, it’s a ~550 square mile lush “oasis” basin in the desert south of Cairo During the Eocene and Oligocene, the Faiyum was forrested At the beginning of the Miocene, the Faiyum had become a dry hollow

  13. Oligocene Primates from Fayum cont. • Aegyptopithecus (genus) • 35-33 mya • Largest of Fayum anthropoids, roughly the size of a modern howler monkey (13-18 lbs) • Short-limbed, slow-moving

  14. Miocene Hominoid Distribution, From Fossils Thus Far Discovered

  15. Miocene Hominoid Fossils These hominoids are more closely related to the ape-human lineage than Old World monkeys. Mostly large-bodied hominoids, more akin to the lineages of orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans. Most of the Miocene forms discovered are so derived that they are probably not ancestral to any living form.

  16. Miocene Fossil Hominoids African forms (23–14 mya) • Especially from western Kenya, these hominoids are, in many ways, primitive. • Proconsul

  17. Miocene Fossil Hominoids European forms (16–11 mya) • From scattered localities in France, Spain, Italy, Greece, Austria, Germany, and Hungary, most are quite derived. • Dryopithecusand Ouranopithecus

  18. Miocene Fossil Hominoids Asian forms (16–7 mya) • The largest and most varied group from Turkey through India/Pakistan and east to southern China, most are highly derived. • Sivapithecus

  19. Sivapithicus • Note the dished face, broad cheekbones, and projecting upper jaw and incisors on both Sivapithecus (left) and the Orangutan (right) Sivapithecus (from Turkey and Pakistan) shows facial features similar to the modern orangutan, suggesting a fairly close evolutionary link.

More Related