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Seagoing Primates

Started by Recusant, April 11, 2020, 04:53:35 AM

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Recusant

The idea here is that more than once, large rafts of vegetation got detached from Africa and drifted across the Atlantic carrying various animals to South America, where at least some of them proceeded to thrive. This includes the ancestors of all the extant New World monkeys, as well as a newly discovered species that appear to have crossed millions of years later.

"Ancient teeth from Peru hint now-extinct monkeys crossed Atlantic from Africa" | ScienceDaily

QuoteFour fossilized monkey teeth discovered deep in the Peruvian Amazon provide new evidence that more than one group of ancient primates journeyed across the Atlantic Ocean from Africa, according to new USC research just published in the journal Science.

The teeth are from a newly discovered species belonging to an extinct family of African primates known as parapithecids. Fossils discovered at the same site in Peru had earlier offered the first proof that South American monkeys evolved from African primates.

The monkeys are believed to have made the more than 900-mile trip on floating rafts of vegetation that broke off from coastlines, possibly during a storm.

"This is a completely unique discovery," said Erik Seiffert, the study's lead author and Professor of Clinical Integrative Anatomical Sciences at Keck School of Medicine of USC. "It shows that in addition to the New World monkeys and a group of rodents known as caviomorphs -- there is this third lineage of mammals that somehow made this very improbable transatlantic journey to get from Africa to South America."

Researchers have named the extinct monkey Ucayalipithecus perdita. The name comes from Ucayali, the area of the Peruvian Amazon where the teeth were found, pithikos, the Greek word for monkey and perdita, the Latin word for lost.

Ucayalipithecus perdita would have been very small, similar in size to a modern-day marmoset.

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