Scientist challenges interpretation of new find,
the oldest primate fossil ever discovered
Field Museum
A skull and jawbones recently found in China is the oldest well-preserved
primate fossil ever discovered as well as the best evidence of
the presence of early primates in Asia. But the fossil raises the tantalizing
possibility that remote human ancestors may have originated in Asia and
stirs up debate about the nature of early primates.
In the words of Robert D. Martin, Provost and Vice President of Academic
Affairs
at Chicago's Field Museum, "It was once thought that primates
originated in North America because that's where the earliest fossils
were found initially; but we should be more open-minded. We still do not
know the area of origin of the primate lineage that eventually led to
humans, and this new find firmly brings Asia into the picture."
Xijun Ni and colleagues describe the fossil as Teilhardina asiatica,
a new species of a genus first recognized from Belgium, in the Jan. 1,
2004, issue of Nature. At 28 grams, T. asiatica is smaller than
any modern primate, and its size and sharp tooth cusps indicate that it
was an insect-eater.
But a "News & Views" commentary in the same issue of Nature
by Dr. Martin disagrees with part of the authors' interpretation of their
new find. Based on T. asiatica's small eye sockets relative to
skull length, Ni and colleagues maintain that the small predator was diurnal
(active during the day). Dr. Martin, on the other hand, says there is
no compelling evidence from the fossil to shake the traditional belief
that the common ancestor of primates, and early representatives such as
members of the genus Teilhardina, were nocturnal (active at night).
"I disagree with the authors on both statistical and biological
grounds," Dr. Martin says. "They excluded significant
data in their analysis, and they did not adequately account for certain
biological features, including the very large opening on the snout for
the nerve connecting with the whiskers, which are best developed in nocturnal
mammals."
Dispersal and biogeography
The earliest known undoubted primate fossils are about 55-million-years
old from sites in North America, Europe and now Asia. Scientists
had previously classified six of them in the genus Teilhardina. Ni adds
T. asiatica to that group, which might therefore be thought to have dispersed
throughout the northern continents.
Dr. Martin agrees that the new fossil belongs to the genus Teilhardina,
but he argues that only it and T. belgica, found in Europe, belong
there because of their shared traits. "The remaining five species
previously identified as Teilhardina must, in fact, be from a quite separate
genus," he said. "And this means Teilhardina was restricted
to Europe and Asia and probably did not disperse all the way to what is
now North America."
Dr. Martin's views have wider implications for biogeography, as well.
Until recently, scientists believed that direct migration of primates
between Asia and Europe around 55 million years ago would not have been
possible due to a transcontinental marine barrier that ran from north
to south down the middle of Eurasia at the time. Now, the presence of
closely related Teilhardina species in China and Belgium adds to
mounting evidence that primates and other mammals were able to migrate
directly between Europe and Asia 55 million years ago.
In any event, Dr. Martin hails the new fossil as a very significant find.
"It provides crucial new information about early primates in Asia
that will help us understand the earliest beginnings of the branch that
eventually led to human evolution," he said.
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