The Late Miocene colobine monkeys from Aragai (Lukeino Formation, Tugen Hills, Kenya)

被引:0
作者
Gommery, Dominique [1 ]
Senut, Brigitte [2 ]
Pickford, Martin [2 ]
Nishimura, Takeshi D. [3 ]
Kipkech, Joseph [4 ]
机构
[1] Sorbonne Univ, Ctr Rech Paleontol Paris CR2P, CNRS, Museum Natl Hist Nat, Campus Pierre & Marie Curie SU,T-46-56,4 Pl Jussi, F-75005 Paris, France
[2] Sorbonne Univ, Ctr Rech Paleontol Paris, MNHN, CNRS,Museum Natl Hist Nat,CR2P UMR, Case Postale 38,57 Rue Cuvier, F-75231 Paris, France
[3] Kyoto Univ, Ctr Evolutionary Origins Human Behav, 41-2 Kanrin, Inuyama, Aichi 4848506, Japan
[4] 4 Orrorin Community Org OCO, POB 232-3040, Kabartonjo, Kenya
关键词
Late Miocene; Kenya; Primates; Cercopithecoidea; Colobinae; Sawecolobus; new genus; new species; OLD-WORLD MONKEYS; ORRORIN-TUGENENSIS; EARLY PLEISTOCENE; MAXILLARY SINUS; PARANASAL PNEUMATIZATION; EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY; DIVERGENCE DATES; MIDDLE MIOCENE; LATE PLIOCENE; FOSSIL;
D O I
10.5252/geodiversitas2022v44a16
中图分类号
Q91 [古生物学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 070903 ;
摘要
Up to the mid-1990's, only a few remains of Cercopithecoidea were known from the Lukeino Formation (Tugen Hills, Kenya). Surveys from 1998 onwards by the Kenya Palaeontology Expedition led to the discovery of new material at Aragai, a site situated in the lower levels of the Lukeino Formation dated at c. 6-5.8 Ma. Most of the collection consists of craniodental specimens generally well-preserved in a hard matrix but there are three postcranial bones. A new taxon of fossil colobine monkey is described: Sawecolobus lukeinoensis n. gen., n. sp. It is a small to medium-sized, short-faced colobine. Sawecolobus n. gen. shares many features with Cercopithecoides Mollett, 1947, especially in the face and the calvarium, but differs from it by the less pronounced supraorbital tori. The two genera differ greatly in mandibular morphology. In Sawecolobus n. gen. the mandibular corpus is slender and not robust as in Cercopithecoides Mollett, 1947, and the anterior surface of its symphysis is inclined posteriorly and not vertical. The numerous new specimens from the Lukeino Formation contribute to our understanding of the local diversity of Miocene Cercopithecoidea and fill out the distribution of the superfamily in the continent for the same period.
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页码:471 / 504
页数:34
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