Sacral vertebral remains of the Middle Miocene hominoid Nacholapithecus kerioi from northern Kenya

被引:7
作者
Kikuchi, Yasuhiro [1 ]
Nakatsukasa, Masato [2 ]
Nakano, Yoshihiko [3 ]
Kunimatsu, Yutaka [4 ]
Shimizu, Daisuke [2 ]
Ogihara, Naomichi [5 ]
Tsujikawa, Hiroshi [6 ]
Takano, Tomo [7 ]
Ishida, Hidemi [8 ]
机构
[1] Saga Univ, Div Human Anat & Biol Anthropol, Dept Anat & Physiol, Fac Med, Saga 8498501, Japan
[2] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Sci, Lab Phys Anthropol, Kyoto 6068502, Japan
[3] Osaka Univ, Grad Sch Human Sci, Lab Biol Anthropol, Osaka 5650871, Japan
[4] Ryukoku Univ, Dept Business Adm, Fac Business Adm, Kyoto 6128577, Japan
[5] Keio Univ, Fac Sci & Technol, Dept Mech Engn, Lab Evolutionary Biomech, Kanagawa 2238522, Japan
[6] Tohoku Bunko Gakuen Univ, Fac Med Sci & Welf, Dept Rehabil, Sendai, Miyagi 9818551, Japan
[7] Japan Monkey Ctr, Inuyama, Aichi 4840081, Japan
[8] Kyoto Univ, Kyoto 6068502, Japan
关键词
Proconsul; Epipliopithecus; Fossil; Ape; Vertebra; YASUNI NATIONAL-PARK; EPIPLIOPITHECUS-VINDOBONENSIS; LAGOTHRIX-LAGOTHRICHA; ATELES-BELZEBUTH; MFANGANO ISLANDS; BODY-MASS; MORPHOLOGY; PROCONSUL; LOCOMOTION; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhevol.2016.03.006
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
This study describes two new sacral specimens of Nacholapithecus kerioi, KNM-BG 427531 and KNM-BG 47687A, from the Aka Aiteputh Formation in Nachola, northern Kenya, excavated in 2002. They are of roughly equal size and are considered to belong to males. When scaled by body mass, the lumbosacral articular surface area of the better preserved specimen, KNM-BG 427531, is smaller than that in Old World monkeys but similar to that in extant great apes and New World monkeys, as well as Proconsul nyanzae. The relatively narrow dimensions of the first sacral vertebral body in the transverse and sagittal planes are characteristics of N. kerioi and P. nyanzae and similar to those of extant great apes. In N. kerioi, lumbosacral surface area relative to body mass is small. This may simply be an extension of a trend from the previously reported small thoracolumbar vertebrae to the sacrum. The first sacral vertebrae of N. kerioi and Epipliopithecus vindobonensis have a higher craniocaudal vertebral body reduction (CVR; a higher CVR indicates a wider cranial width relative to a narrower caudal width), similar to that in Old World monkeys. Old World monkeys have a higher CVR, and usually have three sacral vertebrae, fewer than seen in extant great apes, which have a lower CVR and four to six (sometimes as many as eight) sacral vertebrae. New World monkeys have a lower CVR than Old World monkeys, but generally possess only three sacral vertebrae, and have a large caudal articular surface, which may be related, at least in the Atelidae, to the grasping ability of their tails. The possibility that N. kerioi had only three sacral vertebrae cannot be ruled out, because E. vindobonensis and Old World monkeys, with higher CVRs, have sacra consisting of three sacral vertebrae. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:117 / 125
页数:9
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