
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements: The European Science Foundation
- PART I: Chronology and environment
- PART II: Methods and phylogeny
- PART III Miocone hominoids: function and phylogeny
- 8 Eurasian hominoid evolution in the light of recent Dryopithecus findings
- 9 Functional morphology of Ankarapithecus meteai
- 10 African and Eurasian Miocene hominoids and the origins of the Hominidae
- 11 Phylogenetic relationships of Ouranopithecus macedoniensis (Mammalia, Primates, Hominoidea, Hominidae) of the late Miocene deposits of Central Macedonia (Greece)
- 12 Phylogeny and sexually dimorphic characters: Canine reduction in Ouranopithecus
- 13 Heterochrony and the cranial anatomy of Oreopithecus: some cladistic fallacies and the significance of developmental constraints in phylogenetic analysis
- 14 The late Miocene hominoid from Georgia
- 15 Forelimb function, bone curvature and phylogeny of Sivapithecus
- 16 Sivapithecus and hominoid evolution: some brief comments
- Index
8 - Eurasian hominoid evolution in the light of recent Dryopithecus findings
from PART III - Miocone hominoids: function and phylogeny
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements: The European Science Foundation
- PART I: Chronology and environment
- PART II: Methods and phylogeny
- PART III Miocone hominoids: function and phylogeny
- 8 Eurasian hominoid evolution in the light of recent Dryopithecus findings
- 9 Functional morphology of Ankarapithecus meteai
- 10 African and Eurasian Miocene hominoids and the origins of the Hominidae
- 11 Phylogenetic relationships of Ouranopithecus macedoniensis (Mammalia, Primates, Hominoidea, Hominidae) of the late Miocene deposits of Central Macedonia (Greece)
- 12 Phylogeny and sexually dimorphic characters: Canine reduction in Ouranopithecus
- 13 Heterochrony and the cranial anatomy of Oreopithecus: some cladistic fallacies and the significance of developmental constraints in phylogenetic analysis
- 14 The late Miocene hominoid from Georgia
- 15 Forelimb function, bone curvature and phylogeny of Sivapithecus
- 16 Sivapithecus and hominoid evolution: some brief comments
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In the summer of 1991, remains of a facial cranium of the large fossil ape Dryopithecus were discovered in Can Llobateres by a team from the Institutde Paleontologia M. Crusafont in Sabadell (Barcelona, Spain). The locality of Can Llobateres (Figure 8.1) is situated near Sabadell, close to the Catalan coast in the north-west of the Iberian peninsula, and palaeomagnetic data indicate an age of 9.7 Ma for the lowest levels, and about 9.6 Ma for the highest, where the remains of Dryopithecus were localised (Moyà-Solà & Köhler, 1993,1995; Agustí et al., 1996). During the following years (1992–95), part of a skeleton was found, supposedly belonging to the same individual as the skull (Moyà-Solà & Köhler, 1996). Similarly, remains of two new individuals came from the same level: parts of the hindlimb of a small-sized individual (probably a female); and a milk tooth of an infant. These latest discoveries promise important findings in years to come, considering the great area that has yet to be excavated in this remarkable Catalan locality.
Without doubt, the genus Dryopithecus, described by Eduard Lartet in 1856 from the French locality of Saint Gaudens (Lartet, 1856), has played an important role in our understanding of extant and fossil hominoids. In the 1960s all species of large Miocene apes were included in this genus, which was considered a primitive group of species without any special relationship to living forms. However, in recent years, a growing number of specialists consider the genus Dryopithecus different from other forms such as Proconsul and Kenyapitheus, and its appearance is limited to Europe, where it lived from middle to upper Miocene (13 to 9 Ma).
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- Chapter
- Information
- Hominoid Evolution and Climatic Change in EuropePhylogeny of the Neogene Hominoid Primates of Eurasia, pp. 192 - 212Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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