EVOLUTION
Origins of humanity in Asia
07-02-2009 | AP
Discovery of new fossil Ganlea could mean the common ancestor of monkeys, apes and humans was definitely in Asia, not in Africa.
Panama Star BANGKOK. Fossils recently discovered in Myanmar could prove that the common ancestors of humans, monkeys and apes evolved from primates in Asia, rather than Africa, researchers contend in a study released Wednesday.
However, other scientists said that the finding, while significant, won't end the debate over the origin of anthropoids — the primate grouping that includes ancient species as well as modern humans.
The pieces of 38 million-year-old jawbones and teeth found near Bagan in central Myanmar in 2005 show typical characteristics of primates, said Dr. Chris Beard, a paleontologist at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh and a member of the team that found the fossils.
"When we found it, we knew we had a new type of primate and basically what kind of primate it was," Beard said in a telephone interview from Pittsburgh. "It turns out that jaws and teeth are very diagnostic... They are almost like fingerprints for fossils like this."
The findings were published in the Proceedings of The Royal Society B, a London-based peer-reviewed journal.
Beard and his team from France, Thailand and Myanmar concluded that the fossils — which they dubbed Ganlea megacanina — came from 10 to 15 individuals of a new species that belonged to an extinct family of Asian anthropoid primates known as Amphipithecidae.
Wear and tear found on the canine teeth suggest the tree-dwelling, monkey-like creatures with long tails used their teeth to crack open tropical fruit to get to the pulp and seeds — behavior similar to modern South American saki monkeys that inhabit the Amazon basin, Beard said
"Not only does Ganlea look like an anthropoid, but it was acting like an anthropoid 38 million years ago by having this feeding ecology that was quite specialized," Beard said. His team determined that the fossil was 38 million years old, making it several million years older than any anthropoid found in Africa and the second-oldest discovered in Asia.
"This new fossil Ganlea definitely helps us argue — and we think the argument is pretty close to settled now — that when you go back this far in time, the common ancestor of monkeys, apes and humans was definitely in Asia, not in Africa," Beard said.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The politicians’ habits of putting their personal interests, before those of the people are finished. In my government you can mess up, but you cannot steal”.. President Ricardo Martinelli
Tu Opinión
Además en Panama Star
- No stealing in new government
- Panama will have wind farm
- Cheap houses got the market
- Morales: Obama 'lied'
- No work no pay for legislators
- Zelaya is going back to Honduras this weekend
- Presidential inauguration
- EU will pull ambassadors
- Ortega canceled trip to Panama
- Roxana Mendez gets key to the Mayor’s office
- World Briefs
- Toyota won't host 2010 GP
- Federer, Murray storm into Wimbledon semi-finals
- Man Utd confirm Ronaldo transfer
- Police makes arrest in finance crime probe
- Short takes on life at number nine
- For your diary
- Matan a ‘Negrito’ en Vista Hermosa
- Matan de 4 tiros a joven universitario en Teremar
- Matan de 4 tiros a joven universitario en Teremar
- Matan de 4 tiros a joven universitario en Teremar
- Exigen que Terminal devuelva real a usuarios
- Panamá notifica su decisión de abandonar el Parlacen
- Decomisan "una tonelada de cocaína"
- SUNTRACS protestó en Colón por Ley 30
- MIDES pagará red de oportunidades
- No hay que esperar a que sucedan los desastres para actuar
- Notas apuntadas en mi libreta
- La hoja de coca y su paso por Panamá
- Los viajes de Martinelli y los problemas sociales
- Ganan y con récord
- Sol, mar, remos y nuevos récords







