IPGP - CENPAT   25969
INSTITUTO PATAGONICO DE GEOLOGIA Y PALEONTOLOGIA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
A parapithecid stem anthropoid of African origin in the Paleogene of South America
Autor/es:
TEJEDOR, MARCELO F.; CORNEJO, FANNY M.; CAMPBELL, KENNETH E.; FLEAGLE, JOHN G.; BOND, MARIANO; SEIFFERT, ERIK R.; NOVO, NELSON M.; DE VRIES, DORIEN; TEJEDOR, MARCELO F.; CORNEJO, FANNY M.; CAMPBELL, KENNETH E.; FLEAGLE, JOHN G.; BOND, MARIANO; SEIFFERT, ERIK R.; NOVO, NELSON M.; DE VRIES, DORIEN
Revista:
SCIENCE
Editorial:
AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 368 p. 194 - 197
ISSN:
0036-8075
Resumen:
Phylogenetic evidence suggests that platyrrhine (or New World) monkeys and caviomorph rodents of the Western Hemisphere derive from source groups from the Eocene of Afro-Arabia, a landmass that was ∼1500 to 2000 kilometers east of South America during the late Paleogene. Here, we report evidence for a third mammalian lineage of African origin in the Paleogene of South America-a newly discovered genus and species of parapithecid anthropoid primate from Santa Rosa in Amazonian Perú. Bayesian clock-based phylogenetic analysis nests this genus (Ucayalipithecus) deep within the otherwise Afro-Arabian clade Parapithecoidea and indicates that transatlantic rafting of the lineage leading to Ucayalipithecus likely took place between ∼35 and ∼32 million years ago, a dispersal window that includes the major worldwide drop in sea level that occurred near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary.