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The last fossil primate in N orth A merica, new material of the enigmatic E kgmowechashala from the A rikareean of O regon
Author(s) -
Samuels Joshua X.,
Albright L. Barry,
Fremd Theodore J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
american journal of physical anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.146
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1096-8644
pISSN - 0002-9483
DOI - 10.1002/ajpa.22769
Subject(s) - taxon , primate , cove , turtle (robot) , phylogenetic tree , biology , zoology , geography , paleontology , ecology , archaeology , biochemistry , gene
Objective Primates were common in North America through most of the Eocene, but vanished in the Chadronian, about 35 million years ago. In the Arikareean, about 6 million years later, the enigmatic primate Ekgmowechashala appeared in the Great Plains and Oregon. This taxon shows little resemblance to other North American primates and its phylogenetic position has long been debated. New material of this taxon allows a revised assessment of its age and how it is related to other primates. Methods Recently collected Ekgmowechashala specimens from the Turtle Cove Member of the John Day Formation in Oregon are described. These specimens are compared to previously collected material from South Dakota and Nebraska, as well as other fossil primates from North America and Asia. Results Study of the John Day material allows diagnosis of a new, distinct species. Comparison of Ekgmowechashala to a pair of recently described Asian primates, Muangthanhinius and Bugtilemur , suggests that it is a strepsirrhine adapiform, rather than an omomyid. The well‐defined stratigraphy and dated marker beds of the Turtle Cove Member provide a refined age for Ekgmowechashala occurrences in Oregon, during the Oligocene (early Arikareean). Conclusions The age and morphology of these ekgmowechashaline taxa suggest that the group originated in Asia and dispersed to North America in the Oligocene, after the extinction of other primates in North America. Contemporaneous occurrences of Ekgmowechashala in Oregon and the Great Plains indicate the last non‐human primates vanished in North America about 26 million years ago. Am J Phys Anthropol 158:43–54, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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