- Afropithecus
Taxobox | name = "Afropithecus"
fossil_range =Miocene
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Primates
superfamilia =Hominoidea
familia =Proconsulidae (extinct)
subfamilia =Afropithecinae (extinct)
genus = "Afropithecus" (extinct)
species = "A. turkanensis"
binomial = "Afropithecus turkanensis"
binomial_author = Leakey & Leakey,1986 "Afropithecus" was a
primate that lived inAfrica andSaudi Arabia during the early to middleMiocene , 16-18 million years ago. First named by the Leakeys in 1986, the genus is currently represented by one species, "Afropithecus turkanensis".Morphology
Like many fossil catarrhines, "Afropithecus" is known primarily from teeth. Notable dental features include large protruding incisors, small tusklike canines and upper premolars with a large occlusal area. The teeth of "A. turkanensis" had a thick enamel cover. This cover may have been needed for the diet of "Afropithecus", which might have consisted of nuts and other foods protected by a hard, durable husk. This innovation might have played a key role in establishing a foothold in the
forests ofEurasia by giving "A. turkanensis" access to resources not available to "Proconsul" and other earlierapes . The few postcranials that have been found are similar to " P. nyanzae" and indicate a generalized arboreal quadrupedal locomotor pattern."Afropithecus" is closely related to the better known early Miocene primate Proconsul but is distinguished from this catarrhine by being larger overall in body size and possessing a long, narrow, snout, small orbits and a broad interorbital area. "A. turkanensis" may have certain affinities with "
Heliopithecus ", "Kenyapithecus ", and the largehominoid fromMoroto andNapak , but nothing definite can be said as few common anatomical parts are preserved.Plesiomorphic traits including a large snout link this taxon to earlier Propliopithecids, such asAegyptopithecus , but its distinctive premolar morphology aligns it with hominoids. Most classifications place Afropithecus either as the sister group to living hominoids or as a stem catarrhine.See also
*
List of fossil sites "(with link directory)"
*List of hominina (hominid) fossils "(with images)"External links
*http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=3137824&dopt=Abstract
*http://www.primates.com/history/
*http://www.mc.maricopa.edu/~reffland/anthropology/anthro2003/origins/primates/primate_evol/miocene.html
* [http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/users/haaramo/Metazoa/Deuterostoma/Chordata/Synapsida/Eutheria/Primates/Hominoidea/Proconsulidae.htm Mikko's Phylogeny archives]
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