Study: Primates Moved From Asia To North America 55 M Years Ago

By Dee Chisamera
10:45, March 4th 2008
95 votes
Vote this story
Study: Primates Moved From Asia To North America 55 M Years Ago

The fossil of the earliest known primate to have inhabited the North American continent - Teilhardina magnoliana , dating 55 million years ago, was recently uncovered in the Gulf Coastal Plain of Mississippi, according to a study led by Christopher Beard, paleontologist at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.

Although it is believed that primates first appeared almost synchronously in Asia, Europe and North America, a correlation using the global carbon isotope excursion (CIE) indicated that the primates first migrated to North American before arriving to Europe from Asia.

The newly uncovered fossil is at least 100,000 years older than similar primates, such as Teilhardina brandti discovered in the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming or Teilhardina belgica discovered in Belgium, and dates back shortly after the Paleocene-Eocene period, when the earth was marked by a rapid and dramatic global warming phenomenon, known as Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum - PETM.

This is presumably the reason why the small, one-ounce creature migrated from Asia to North America instead of Europe. The high temperatures on Earth’s surface, the melting of ice caps and the expansion of typical lush vegetation towards the North American continent, which was then connected to Asia through a landmass, determined Teilhardina to simply follow the line of vegetation.

The creatures continued to move towards the interior of the North American continent, as temperatures were cooler there, and later reached Europe, probably 10,000 – 20,000 years later, after the sea levels dropped significantly.

As Beard said in his study, “this primate is one component of the earliest Eocene Red Hot local fauna, which also includes sharks and rays, bony fishes, snakes, lizards, crocodilians, birds, and a variety of other mammals,” clearly suggesting that the primates lived in Mississippi when sea levels were high.

The tiny exemplary uncovered in the Gulf Coastal Plain of Mississippi presumably looked like the big-eyed tarsiers in Southeast Asia, they lived in trees and most probably ate fruits and insects. Its presence on the North American continent at that particular time can be explained through the muggy, hot environments the creature preferred.

Image credits: PNAS



© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Tag team show whale rescues worth the effort

Sydney - When whales become stranded on beaches in Australia, television pictures flash across the globe of volunteers with towels and buckets keeping the hapless creatures wet and trying to coax...

Endeavour Successfully Lands At Edwards Air Force Base

Endeavour Successfully Lands At Edwards Air Force Base

With Commander Chris Ferguson and pilot Eric Boe at the controls, space shuttle Endeavour descended to a smooth landing at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The STS-126 crew members concluded their...

Endeavour To Land In California

NASA announced shifted the Endeavour’s landing site from Florida to California. Weather conditions forced flight controllers to pass on Endeavour’s second landing opportunity at Kennedy Space ...

Endeavour Undocks And Heads For Earth

Endeavour Undocks And Heads For Earth

The space shuttle Endeavour has undocked from the International Space Station (ISS) on Friday and it is headed home, to the Kennedy Space Center. After running some tests of the critical landing...

Venus, Jupiter And The Moon: What A Trio!

Venus, Jupiter And The Moon: What A Trio!

It seems that Venus and Jupiter, the two brightest planets in our solar system, have been moving toward each other for more than a month in the southwestern sky at dusk. This phenomenon will reach...

dotclear
Latest videos in Science
Up in the Canadian Sky, a...
Astronauts Conduct Longest...
Whales die in mass stranding
Astronauts finish longest...
Raw Video: Astronauts Venture...

dotclear
Science You are here: Science
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Science
Harvard Scientists Unravel The Secret Of AgingHarvard Scientists Unravel The Secret Of Aging

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
The Dishonest MayorThe Dishonest Mayor

» read full story
dotclear