BEIJING, Feb. 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Scary old Hollywood
movies sometimes depicted humans running from and being devoured by
dinosaurs. Notion scientists were quick to debunk by saying the two species
did not roam earth at the same time.
But two newly reported complete skeletons of
primates show this group that includes humans' closest relatives such as
chimps and lemurs is 10 million years older than scientists previously thought,
pushing our earliest ancestors closer to the Age of Dinosaurs.
The discovery of the most primitive known skeleton of
a primate extends the primate geologic time and changes the current theory
of how primate traits evolved.
"It's sort of a window into what the earliest
primates would have looked like," said study author Jonathan Bloch of the
Florida Museum of Natural History.
Dinosaurs disappeared about 65 million years ago
and some paleontologists suspected that primates emerged not long after they
went extinct, based on fossil traces of a group of small mammals called
plesiadapiforms.
Early studies labeled these animals primitive
primates, but in recent years, they were reclassified as flying lemurs, a small,
gliding mammal native to Southeast Asia that is not actually a lemur, but is a
close primate relative.
Bloch and his colleagues studied the new fossil and
some similar modern and early primate skeletons to pinpoint their location on
the primate family tree. The branches of that tree, which includes humans,
chimps, gorillas, baboons, and lemurs, can all be traced back 55 million years
ago, when the first undisputed primates appear in the fossil record.
"There's always been an enormous amount of debate as
to what these things are," Bloch told Livescience, referring to
plesiadapiforms.
One reason for the debate was that scientists, until
now, lacked a complete view of the creatures. Like most primates other than
modern humans, plesiadapiforms are rather small and skeletons of smaller animals
erode more easily -- only teeth and a few isolated bones were had been found
before.
"There's only so much that you can say about teeth,"
Bloch said.
Bloch recently made the rare discovery of nearly
complete skeletons of two plesiadapiform species, now named Ignacius
clarkforkensis and Dryomomys szalayi, embedded in limestone outside America's
Yellowstone National Park.
By analyzing the skeletons and comparing them to more
than 85 modern and extinct primate species, the researchers
showed plesiadapaforms look a lot more like primates than
paleoanthropologists had imagined and look nothing like their flying lemur
cousins, Bloch said. The findings are detailed in the Jan. 23 issue of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
When examining the skeletons, Bloch and his
colleagues looked for several telling features of primates: a bone that covers
important structures in the ear, teeth that are critical to a diet richer in
fruits and plants than insects and skeletons adapted for tree-living.
"Primates tend to have really kind of mobile joints,
so that they can wrap their hands and feet around branches," co-author Eric
Sargis of Yale University said. "The whole skeleton of primates is really kind
of re-packaged for tree living."
D. szalayi had several of these primate features: it
was small, about the size of a mouse; its teeth show that it mostly ate fruits;
and it had long fingers and claws perfect for climbing around in trees.
"Our analysis shows that they're the closest
relatives of modern primates, and therefore, we've kind of brought them back
into the order primates," Sargis explained.
Because these archaic primates exist in the fossil
record long before the appearance of the first true primates 55 million years
ago, they are most primitive primates known.
Primates must have acquired their traits gradually,
because plesiadapiforms have some, but not all, of the characteristics of
primates, Bloch and Sargis said.
"In the past, people had hypothesized that all of
these kinds of primate features evolved as a single complex of features at one
time, whereas what we're finding is throughout those first 10 million years of
primate evolution, these features were evolving piecemeal, kind of one-by-one,
accruing through time," Sargis pointed out.
Though plesiadapiforms aren't flying lemurs, as was
once the prevailing opinion, the Bloch and Sargis skeletal analysis shows that
flying lemurs and another modern, non-primate mammal, the tree shrew, are
primates' closest living relatives.
DNA studies of all three types of mammals --
primates, flying lemurs, and tree shrews -- confirm Bloch and Sargis's
finding.
"So all three of those groups," Sargis said, "you can
trace back to a single common ancestor."
(Agencies)