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Chapter Summary

  • Fossils provide direct evidence of an organism's existence. Frequently only the hardest tissues (bones and teeth) are preserved, but sometimes we get fossilized impressions of soft tissues.
  • We can use a variety of methods to assess how old fossils are and to glean information from the fossils about how the organism lived.
  • Humans are mammals and primates.
  • Mammals are characterized by homiothermy, heterodontism, lactation, internal gestation, and a set of unique brain structures.
  • Primates are characterized by a postorbital bar, or bony, enclosed eye socket; hands and feet capable of grasping; nails instead of claws on the ends of the digits; extensively overlapping visual fields; a large brain relative to body size; and long gestation and slow postnatal growth compared to maternal body size.
  • The earliest primates are thought to be derived from a group related to the Pleseadapids sometime in the late Cretaceous or early Paleocene.
  • There are three main hypotheses for the evolution of primates from Archontan stock; they center on arboreality; visual adaptation; and fruit, flower, and insect predation.
  • Three main primate groups show up in the fossils of the Eocene age: the Omomyoids, the Adapoids, and the Simiiform anthropoids.
  • The Oligocene fossils reveal a radiation of anthropoid forms and the colonization of South America by anthropoid primates.
  • By the Miocene, a new set of primates, the hominoids, began to radiate out of Africa. These primates exhibit a set of morphological characteristics that characterize the living apes.
  • The hominoids experienced a decrease in diversity by the terminal Miocene, at the same time that the number and diversity of nonhominoid anthropoid primates (monkeys) increased.
  • The best representations of primate evolution are those that reveal general patterns and trends over time.







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