Miocene cercopithecoidea from the Tugen Hills, Kenya.

J Hum Evol

Department of Anthropology, Yale University, P.O. Box 208277, New Haven, CT 06520-8277, USA.

Published: November 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Tugen Hills fossil deposits provide insights into African faunal evolution from 15.5 to 0.25 million years ago, revealing crucial phylogenetic events and long-term environmental changes.
  • Among the collected specimens, new cercopithecoid material highlights the evolution of primates, specifically early African colobines, and extends the geographic range of certain species.
  • The findings suggest that initial African colobines were primarily arboreal, challenging earlier theories that proposed a semi-terrestrial adaptation in later species.

Article Abstract

Miocene to Pleistocene fossiliferous sediments in the Tugen Hills span the time period from at least 15.5 Ma to 0.25 Ma, including time periods unknown or little known elsewhere in Africa. Consequently, the Tugen Hills deposits hold the potential to inform us about crucial phylogenetic events in African faunal evolution and about long-term environmental change. Among the specimens collected from this region are a number of discoveries already important to the understanding of primate evolution. Here, we describe additional cercopithecoid material from the Miocene deposits in the Tugen Hills sequence, including those from securely dated sites in the Muruyur Beds (16-13.4 Ma), the Mpesida Beds (7-6.2 Ma) and the Lukeino Formation (∼ 6.2-5.7 Ma). We also evaluate previously described material from the Ngorora Formation (13-8.8 Ma). Identified taxa include Victoriapithecidae gen. et sp. indet., cf. Parapapio lothagamensis, and at least two colobines. Specimens attributed to cf. Pp. lothagamensis would extend the species' geographic range beyond its type locality. In addition, we describe specimens sharing derived characters with modern African colobines (Tribe: Colobina), a finding that is congruent with previous molecular estimates of colobine divergence dates. These colobine specimens represent some of the earliest known members of the modern African colobine radiation and, in contrast to previous hypotheses, suggest that early African colobines were mainly arboreal and that semi-terrestrial Late Miocene and Plio-Pleistocene colobine taxa were secondarily derived in their locomotor adaptations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2010.05.005DOI Listing

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