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Science 5 December 1986:
Vol. 234. no. 4781, pp. 1247 - 1249
DOI: 10.1126/science.234.4781.1247

Articles

Age of the Earliest African Anthropoids

JOHN G. FLEAGLE 1, THOMAS M. BOWN 2, JOHN D. OBRADOVICH 2, and ELWYN L. SIMONS 3

1 Department of Anatomical Sciences, Health Sciences Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794.
2 United States Geological Survey, Denver, CO 80225.
3 Duke University, Durham, NC 27705.

The earliest fossil record of African anthropoid primates (monkeys and apes) comes from the Jebel Qatrani Formation in the Fayum depression of Egypt. Reevaluation of both geologic and faunal evidence indicates that this formation was deposited in the early part of the Oligocene Epoch, more than 31 million years ago, earlier than previous estimates. The great antiquity of the fossil higher primates from Egypt accords well with their primitive morphology compared with later Old World higher primates. Thus, the anthropoid primates and hystricomorph rodents from Fayum are also considerably older than the earliest higher primates and rodents from South America.

Submitted on July 14, 1986
Accepted on October 10, 1986


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Revised age estimates for the later Paleogene mammal faunas of Egypt and Oman.
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PNAS 103, 5000-5005
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Discovery of the oldest known anthropoidean skull from the paleogene of Egypt.
E. Simons (1990)
Science 247, 1567-1569
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