Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia
11 p. : ill. 26 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 10-11). Although it is widely thought that euprimates originated in Asia, the fossil record of early euprimates remains sparse there. We describe herein a new omomyid euprimate, Baataromomys ulaanus, n. gen. et sp., based on an isolated rig...
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ftamnh:oai:digitallibrary.amnh.org:2246/5862 2023-05-15T15:42:42+02:00 Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia American Museum novitates, no. 3571 Asian Cenozoic euprimate Ni, Xijun. Beard, K. Christopher. Meng, Jin (Paleontologist) Wang, Yuan-qing. Gebo, Daniel Lee, 1955- 2007 524126 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5862 eng en_US eng New York, NY : American Museum of Natural History American Museum novitates, no. 3571 http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5862 QL1 .A436 no.3571 2007 Baataromomys ulaanus Primates Fossil -- Geographical distribution Primates -- Dispersal -- Bering Land Bridge Omomyidae -- Phylogeny Mammals Fossil -- China -- Erlani Basin Fossil -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- China -- Inner Mongolia text 2007 ftamnh 2022-03-24T06:32:42Z 11 p. : ill. 26 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 10-11). Although it is widely thought that euprimates originated in Asia, the fossil record of early euprimates remains sparse there. We describe herein a new omomyid euprimate, Baataromomys ulaanus, n. gen. et sp., based on an isolated right lower m2 from Bumbanian strata at Wulanboerhe in the Erlian Basin of Inner Mongolia, China. In terms of the size and proportions of m2, Baataromomys ulaanus is intermediate between Eurasian and North American species that are usually assigned to Teilhardina. Morphologically, m2 of Baataromomys differs from that of Teilhardina and North American small-bodied omomyids (including Anemorhysis, Tetonoides, Trogolemur, and Sphacorhysis) in having a smaller paraconid that is less fully connate with the metaconid, a lower entoconid, a weaker crest connecting the metaconid with the entoconid, and a weaker buccal cingulid. The new taxon is much smaller and lower crowned than Steinius, a genus commonly regarded as a basal omomyid. Despite the substantial difference in size, the m2s of Baataromomys and Steinius share some important features, including a very broad talonid basin and a relatively low hypoconid and cristid obliqua. Given its early occurrence and primitive anatomy, Baataromomys may eventually help to clarify the phylogenetic relationships among basalomomyids, but more complete specimens will be required to test this possibility. Baataromomys brandti from the basal Wasatchian zone Wa-0 in the northern Bighorn Basin, Wyoming, was previously allocated to Teilhardina. However, several dental features shared by B. brandti and B. ulaanus suggest that they are closely related. The co-occurrence of Baataromomys in Asia and North America indicates that small-bodied euprimates were able to dispersal across the Beringian region near the Paleocene-Eocene boundary. Text Bering Land Bridge American Museum of Natural History: AMNH scientific publications |
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American Museum of Natural History: AMNH scientific publications |
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English |
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QL1 .A436 no.3571 2007 Baataromomys ulaanus Primates Fossil -- Geographical distribution Primates -- Dispersal -- Bering Land Bridge Omomyidae -- Phylogeny Mammals Fossil -- China -- Erlani Basin Fossil -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- China -- Inner Mongolia |
spellingShingle |
QL1 .A436 no.3571 2007 Baataromomys ulaanus Primates Fossil -- Geographical distribution Primates -- Dispersal -- Bering Land Bridge Omomyidae -- Phylogeny Mammals Fossil -- China -- Erlani Basin Fossil -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- China -- Inner Mongolia Ni, Xijun. Beard, K. Christopher. Meng, Jin (Paleontologist) Wang, Yuan-qing. Gebo, Daniel Lee, 1955- Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia |
topic_facet |
QL1 .A436 no.3571 2007 Baataromomys ulaanus Primates Fossil -- Geographical distribution Primates -- Dispersal -- Bering Land Bridge Omomyidae -- Phylogeny Mammals Fossil -- China -- Erlani Basin Fossil -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- Paleogene -- China -- Inner Mongolia Paleontology -- China -- Erlani Basin Paleontology -- China -- Inner Mongolia |
description |
11 p. : ill. 26 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 10-11). Although it is widely thought that euprimates originated in Asia, the fossil record of early euprimates remains sparse there. We describe herein a new omomyid euprimate, Baataromomys ulaanus, n. gen. et sp., based on an isolated right lower m2 from Bumbanian strata at Wulanboerhe in the Erlian Basin of Inner Mongolia, China. In terms of the size and proportions of m2, Baataromomys ulaanus is intermediate between Eurasian and North American species that are usually assigned to Teilhardina. Morphologically, m2 of Baataromomys differs from that of Teilhardina and North American small-bodied omomyids (including Anemorhysis, Tetonoides, Trogolemur, and Sphacorhysis) in having a smaller paraconid that is less fully connate with the metaconid, a lower entoconid, a weaker crest connecting the metaconid with the entoconid, and a weaker buccal cingulid. The new taxon is much smaller and lower crowned than Steinius, a genus commonly regarded as a basal omomyid. Despite the substantial difference in size, the m2s of Baataromomys and Steinius share some important features, including a very broad talonid basin and a relatively low hypoconid and cristid obliqua. Given its early occurrence and primitive anatomy, Baataromomys may eventually help to clarify the phylogenetic relationships among basalomomyids, but more complete specimens will be required to test this possibility. Baataromomys brandti from the basal Wasatchian zone Wa-0 in the northern Bighorn Basin, Wyoming, was previously allocated to Teilhardina. However, several dental features shared by B. brandti and B. ulaanus suggest that they are closely related. The co-occurrence of Baataromomys in Asia and North America indicates that small-bodied euprimates were able to dispersal across the Beringian region near the Paleocene-Eocene boundary. |
format |
Text |
author |
Ni, Xijun. Beard, K. Christopher. Meng, Jin (Paleontologist) Wang, Yuan-qing. Gebo, Daniel Lee, 1955- |
author_facet |
Ni, Xijun. Beard, K. Christopher. Meng, Jin (Paleontologist) Wang, Yuan-qing. Gebo, Daniel Lee, 1955- |
author_sort |
Ni, Xijun. |
title |
Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia |
title_short |
Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia |
title_full |
Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia |
title_fullStr |
Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Discovery of the first early Cenozoic euprimate (Mammalia) from Inner Mongolia |
title_sort |
discovery of the first early cenozoic euprimate (mammalia) from inner mongolia |
publisher |
New York, NY : American Museum of Natural History |
publishDate |
2007 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5862 |
genre |
Bering Land Bridge |
genre_facet |
Bering Land Bridge |
op_relation |
American Museum novitates, no. 3571 http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5862 |
_version_ |
1766376662756229120 |