Publication | Closed Access
Grasping Primate Origins
360
Citations
33
References
2002
Year
BiologyPrimatologyMorphological EvidenceLiving FossilNatural SciencesMammalogyEvolutionary BiologyEocene-and-later PrimatesPrimate SystematicsPrimate FossilMotor ControlModern AspectPrimate BehaviorPaleoecologyPaleocene Plesiadapiform CarpolestesPrimate OriginsSynapsida
The evolutionary history that led to Eocene-and-later primates of modern aspect (Euprimates) has been uncertain. We describe a skeleton of Paleocene plesiadapiform Carpolestes simpsoni that includes most of the skull and many postcranial bones. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that Carpolestidae are closely related to Euprimates. C. simpsoni had long fingers and an opposable hallux with a nail. It lacked orbital convergence and an ankle specialized for leaping. We infer that the ancestor of Euprimates was primitively an arboreal grasper adapted for terminal branch feeding rather than a specialized leaper or visually directed predator.
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