A New Great Ape From the Late Miocene of Turkey
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2007
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Anthropological Soc Nippon
Abstract
An adult maxilla and partial mandibles of a hominoid primate recovered from the late Miocene locality of (Corakyerler (central Anatolia) are recognized as a new species of Ouranopithecus, one of the rare western Eurasian hominoids to have survived well into the late Miocene. This species is distinguished from its sister taxon, and likely ancestor Ouranopithecus macedoniensis, by a constellation of dentognathic features. The new species, in which the male postcanine dentition is larger than that of any other Miocene ape besides Gigantopithecus, is associated with evidence indicating an open, dry environment. Dental features of Ouranopithecus apparently evolved in parallel with later Australopithecus, and suggest that Ouranopithecus was adapted to a diet of tough/abrasive foods.
Description
Kaya, Ferhat/0000-0003-0900-3390; Sevim Erol, Ayla/0000-0001-7776-3864
Keywords
Primates, Hominoidea, Late Miocene, Corakyerler, Turkey
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
WoS Q
Q4
Scopus Q
Q2
Source
Volume
115
Issue
2
Start Page
153
End Page
158