
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
9 - Functional morphology of Ankarapithecus meteai
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
During the early part of this century, when fossil apes were first discovered it was common practice to try to find links between them and the living apes. This tendency was effectively halted by the 1965 review of Simons and Pilbeam, who grouped almost all known fossil apes into a single clade which they called Dryopithecus, sinking numerous genera previously recognised into just three subgenera of Dryopithecus. On the other hand, these authors did support the link between what was then called Ramapithecus and the line leading to modern humans (Simons & Pilbeam, 1965).
More recently, the discovery of new fossil ape specimens has led to renewed suggestions of a direct relationship between fossil and recent apes. The first of these proposed a link between Sivapithecus and the orang-utan based on characters of the face (Andrews & Cronin, 1982) and skull (Ward & Pilbeam, 1983). One decade later, new material of Dryopithecus led to the suggestion that this genus was more closely related to the African apes than were other fossil apes (Begun, 1992), and an even closer relationship was suggested between Graecopithecus (referred to as Ouranopithecus) and hominines by de Bonis & Koufos (1993). Meanwhile the supposed relationship between Ramapithecus (now Sivapithecus) and humans had effectively been denied by its inclusion in the genus Sivapithecus. The only one of these proposed sets of relationships to find full support in a recent review of hominoid evolution (Andrews, 1992) was that linking Sivapithecus with the orang-utan, but even for this there is contrary evidence provided by recent discoveries of postcranial bones (Pilbeam et al., 1990).
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- Information
- Hominoid Evolution and Climatic Change in EuropePhylogeny of the Neogene Hominoid Primates of Eurasia, pp. 213 - 230Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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