(Press-News.org) An international team of researchers has announced the discovery of the world's oldest known fossil primate skeleton, an animal that lived about 55 million years ago and was even smaller than today's smallest primate, the pygmy mouse lemur. The new specimen, named Archicebus achilles, was unearthed from an ancient lake bed in central China's Hubei Province, near the course of the modern Yangtze River. In addition to being the oldest known example of an early primate skeleton, this almost complete new fossil is crucial for illuminating a pivotal event in primate and human evolution: the divergence between the lineage leading to modern monkeys, apes, and humans (collectively known as anthropoids) and the branch leading to living tarsiers—small, nocturnal tree-dwelling primates. The discovery, described today in the journal Nature, also provides evidence that the earliest primates were active during the day, climbed trees, and primarily ate insects.
"Archicebus marks the first time that we have a reasonably complete picture of a primate close to the divergence between tarsiers and anthropoids," said lead researcher Xijun Ni, a scientist at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and a research associate at the American Museum of Natural History. "It represents a big step forward in our efforts to chart the course of the earliest phases of primate and human evolution."
The fossil was recovered from sedimentary rock strata that were deposited in an ancient lake roughly 55 million years ago, a time of global greenhouse conditions, when much of the world was shrouded in tropical rainforests and palm trees grew as far north as Alaska. Like most other fossils recovered from ancient lake strata, the skeleton of Archicebus was found by splitting apart the thin layers of rock containing the fossil. As a result, the skeleton is now preserved in two complementary pieces, each of which contains elements of the actual skeleton as well as impressions of bones from the other side.
In order to study the entire fossil, the scientific team scanned the specimen with a world-leading level of detail and contrast using the state-of-the-art high energy x-ray facilities of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble, France.
"To reveal the remarkable secrets that have been hidden in the rock for millions of years, we undertook extensive work, applied state-of-the-art technology, and set up intensive international cooperation behind the scenes at several museums," said John Flynn, Frick Curator of Fossil Mammals and dean of the Richard Gilder Graduate School at the American Museum of Natural History. "It took us 10 years."
Three-dimensional digital reconstruction of the fossil using the scans performed at the ESRF allowed the team to study the tiny, fragile skeleton of Archicebus in intricate detail.
"Speaking virtually, we made the skeleton stand up," said Paul Tafforeau, paleoanthropologist and beamline scientist at the ESRF.
The skeleton of Archicebus is about 7 million years older than the oldest fossil primate skeletons known previously. It belongs to an entirely separate branch of the primate evolutionary tree from those specimens, lying much closer to the lineage leading to modern monkeys, apes, and humans.
"Archicebus differs radically from any other primate, living or fossil, known to science," said Christopher Beard, a paleontologist at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. "It looks like an odd hybrid with the feet of a small monkey, the arms, legs and teeth of a very primitive primate, and a primitive skull bearing surprisingly small eyes. It will force us to rewrite how the anthropoid lineage evolved."
The evolutionary relationships among primates and their potential relatives have been debated intensively for many years.
"To test these different hypotheses and determine the phylogenetic position of the new primate, we developed a massive data matrix including more than 1,000 anatomical characters and scored for 157 mammals," said Jin Meng, a curator in the Division of Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History.
Statistical analyses aimed at reconstructing Archicebus show that it would have weighed about 20 to 30 grams (about 1 ounce) as an adult. Its tiny size and very basal evolutionary position support the idea that the earliest primates, as well as the common ancestor of tarsiers and anthropoids, was miniscule. This overturns some previous scientific ideas suggesting that the earliest members of the anthropoid lineage were quite large, the size of modern monkeys.
INFORMATION:
Other authors include Daniel Gebo, Northern Illinois University, and Marian Dagosto, Northwestern University in Chicago. Funding was provided by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the National Basic Research Program of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the U.S. National Science Foundation, the ESRF, and the American Museum of Natural History.
Discovery of oldest primate skeleton helps chart early evolution of humans, apes
Fossil suggests that earliest primates were tiny day-dwelling tree-climbers
2013-06-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Nutrition during first 1,000 days of life crucial for childhood and economic development
2013-06-06
A new Lancet series on maternal and childhood nutrition finds that over 3 million children die every year of malnutrition—accounting for nearly half of all child deaths under 5. Along with state-of-the-art global estimates on the long-term burden of malnutrition, the series presents a new framework for prevention and treatment that considers underlying factors, such as food security, social conditions, resources, and governance. Professor Robert Black, Department of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, led the consortium of experts ...
Fear learning studies point to a potential new treatment for PTSD
2013-06-06
A team of researchers from Emory, University of Miami and Scripps Research Institute has identified a compound that can reduce PTSD-like symptoms in mice after they are exposed to stress. The discovery could lead to a treatment given to people shortly after a traumatic event, aimed at preventing possible PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder).
The results are scheduled for publication Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
The team's research meshes with recent studies – one looking at military personnel injured in Iraq -- hinting that morphine administration ...
Scientists discover oldest primate skeleton
2013-06-06
DeKalb, Ill. – An international team of paleontologists that includes Northern Illinois University anthropologist Dan Gebo is announcing the discovery of a nearly complete, articulated skeleton of a new tiny, tree-dwelling primate dating back 55 million years.
The Eocene Epoch fossil was recovered from Hubei Province in central China.
"This is the oldest primate skeleton of this quality and completeness ever discovered and one of the most primitive primate fossils ever documented," Gebo said. "The origin of primates sets the first milestone for all primate lineages, ...
Researchers announce discovery of oldest-known fossil primate skeleton
2013-06-06
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania…An international team of researchers has announced the discovery of the world's oldest known fossil primate skeleton representing a previously unknown genus and species named Archicebus achilles. The fossil was unearthed from an ancient lake bed in central China's Hubei Province, near the course of the modern Yangtze River. In addition to being the oldest known example of an early primate skeleton, the new fossil is crucial for illuminating a pivotal event in primate and human evolution—the evolutionary divergence between the lineage leading to ...
Electronic stimulation therapy for obstructive sleep apnea found safe, effective
2013-06-06
A clinical study has found that electronic stimulation therapy to reduce obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is safe and effective.
The Stimulation Therapy for Apnea Reduction (The STAR Trial) evaluated an implantable electronic stimulation device called Inspire™ Upper Airway Stimulation (UAS) therapy designed to deliver mild stimulation to the main nerve of the tongue (hypoglossal nerve) on each breathing cycle during sleep. The stimulation is intended to restore tone to key airway muscles and prevent airway collapse.
Patients control when the Inspire therapy is turned ...
Researchers reveal malaria's deadly grip
2013-06-06
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen, in collaboration with Seattle Biomedical Research Institute, the University of Oxford, NIMR Tanzania and Retrogenix LTD, have identified how malaria parasites growing inside red blood cells stick to the sides of blood vessels in severe cases of malaria.
The discovery may advance the development of vaccines or drugs to combat severe malaria by stopping the parasites attaching to blood vessels. The results are now published in the scientific journal Nature.
Though researchers have known for over a century that red blood cells ...
Short-term therapy given by para-professionals reduces symptoms among rape survivors in DRC
2013-06-06
Survivors of sexual violence have long gone without treatment and suffered debilitating symptoms of depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder.
But a randomized controlled study of 405 rape survivors in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo proves that short-term therapy delivered by para-professionals is effective at reducing mental health symptoms, according to a study released in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The study, "Controlled Trial of Psychotherapy for Congolese Survivors of Sexual Violence," provided 154 women cognitive processing therapy ...
Nontoxic cancer therapy proves effective against metastatic cancer
2013-06-06
Tampa, FL (June 5, 2013) -- A combination of nontoxic dietary and hyperbaric oxygen therapies effectively increased survival time in a mouse model of aggressive metastatic cancer, a research team from the Hyperbaric Biomedical Research Laboratory at the University of South Florida has found.
The study, "The Ketogenic Diet and Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Prolong Survival in Mice with Systemic Metastatic Cancer," was published online today in PLOS ONE.
Led by Dominic D'Agostino, PhD, principal investigator in the Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology at the ...
UCLA scientists isolate new population of pluripotent stem cells in fat removed during liposuction
2013-06-06
Researchers from the UCLA Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology have isolated a new population of primitive, stress-resistant human pluripotent stem cells easily derived from fat tissue that are able to differentiate into virtually every cell type in the human body without genetic modification.
The cells, called Multi-lineage Stress-Enduring (Muse-AT) stem cells from fat, or adipose, tissue, were discovered by "scientific accident" when a piece of equipment failed in the lab, killing all the stem cells in the experiment except for the Muse-AT cells. The research team ...
Irish chronicles reveal links between cold weather and volcanic eruptions
2013-06-06
Medieval chronicles have given an international group of researchers a glimpse into the past to assess how historical volcanic eruptions affected the weather in Ireland up to 1500 years ago.
By critically assessing over 40,000 written entries in the Irish Annals and comparing them with measurements taken from ice cores, the researchers successfully linked the climatic aftermath of volcanic eruptions to extreme cold weather events in Ireland over a 1200-year period from 431 to 1649.
Their study, which has been published today, 6 June, in IOP Publishing's journal Environmental ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
MIT engineers develop a fully 3D-printed electrospray engine
Speculum exams unnecessary for HPV screening
Reduced prediabetes in people who ate broccoli compound
Landmark atlas reveals how aging breast tissue shapes breast cancer risk
SHEA supports key federal advisory committees
Neurologic complications of flu nearly 50 times greater for children with underlying neurologic conditions
Killing H5N1 in waste milk — an alternative to pasteurization
NTT Research and Harvard scientists optimize biohybrid ray development with machine learning
Mapping connections in a neuronal network
Study: Air pollution exposure late in pregnancy increases NICU admission risk
Engineers enable a drone to determine its position in the dark and indoors
U-M materials scientist, chemical engineer elected into National Academy of Engineering
Evolutionary tradeoffs: Research explores the role of iron levels in COVID-19 infections
Ecological Society of America selects 2025 EEE Scholars
U.S. stream network is longer during annual high-flow conditions
Seismic techniques reveal how intense storms in 2023 impacted aquifers in Greater Los Angeles
Elephant seals in the Pacific serve as deep-ocean sentinels, revealing patterns otherwise hard to measure
Depression linked with higher risk of long-term physical health conditions
Los Angeles groundwater remained depleted after 2023 deluge, study finds
Foraging seals enable scientists to measure fish abundance across the vast Pacific Ocean
Dessert stomach emerges in the brain
Fungus ‘hacks’ natural immune system causing neurodegeneration in fruit flies
A new view on 300 million years of brain evolution
Birds have developed complex brains independently from mammals
Protected habitats aren’t enough to save endangered mammals, MSU researchers find
Scientists find new biomarker that predicts cancer aggressiveness
UC Irvine astronomers gauge livability of exoplanets orbiting white dwarf stars
Child with rare epileptic disorder receives long-awaited diagnosis
WashU to develop new tools for detecting chemical warfare agent
Tufts researchers discover how experiences influence future behavior
[Press-News.org] Discovery of oldest primate skeleton helps chart early evolution of humans, apesFossil suggests that earliest primates were tiny day-dwelling tree-climbers