Additional postcranial elements of Teilhardina Belgica: The oldest European primate

Daniel L. Gebo*, Richard Smith, Marian Dagosto, Thierry Smith

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Teilhardina belgica is one of the earliest fossil primates ever recovered and the oldest fossil primate from Europe. As such, this taxon has often been hypothesized as a basal tarsiiform on the basis of its primitive dental formula with four premolars and a simplified molar cusp pattern. Until recently [see Rose et al.: Am J Phys Anthropol 146 (2011) 281-305; Gebo et al.: J Hum Evol 63 (2012) 205-218], little was known concerning its postcranial anatomy with the exception of its well-known tarsals. In this article, we describe additional postcranial elements for T belgica and compare these with other tarsiiforms and with primitive adapi-forms. The forelimb of T belgica indicates an arboreal primate with prominent forearm musculature, good elbow rotational mobility, and a horizontal, rather than a vertical body posture. The lateral hand positions imply grasps adaptive for relatively large diameter supports given its small body size. The hand is long with very long fingers, especially the middle phalanges. The hind-limb indicates foot inversion capabilities, frequent leaping, arboreal quadrupedalism, climbing, and grasping. The long and well-muscled hallux can be coupled with long lateral phalanges to reconstruct a foot with long grasping digits. Our phyletic analysis indicates that we can identify several postcranial characteristics shared in common for stem primates as well as note several derived postcranial characters for Tarsiiformes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)388-406
Number of pages19
JournalAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology
Volume156
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2015

Keywords

  • Limb anatomy
  • Omomyidae
  • Primate evolution

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Anatomy
  • Anthropology

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