Global Information Lookup Global Information

Afrasia djijidae information


Afrasia djijidae
Temporal range: 37 Ma
PreꞒ
O
S
D
C
P
T
J
K
Pg
N
Late Middle Eocene
Four isolated teeth of Afrasia djijidae. Clockwise from top left: right second upper molar (M2), right first upper molar (M1), right lower second molar (m2), and right lower third molar (m3).
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Family: Afrotarsiidae
Genus: Afrasia
Chaimanee et al. 2012
Species:
A. djijidae
Binomial name
Afrasia djijidae
Chaimanee et al. 2012

Afrasia djijidae is a fossil primate that lived in Myanmar approximately 37 million years ago, during the late middle Eocene. The only species in the genus Afrasia, it was a small primate, estimated to weigh around 100 grams (3.5 oz). Despite the significant geographic distance between them, Afrasia is thought to be closely related to Afrotarsius, an enigmatic fossil found in Libya and Egypt that dates to 38–39 million years ago. If this relationship is correct, it suggests that early simians (a related group or clade consisting of monkeys, apes, and humans) dispersed from Asia to Africa during the middle Eocene and would add further support to the hypothesis that the first simians evolved in Asia, not Africa. Neither Afrasia nor Afrotarsius, which together form the family Afrotarsiidae, is considered ancestral to living simians, but they are part of a side branch or stem group known as eosimiiforms. Because they did not give rise to the stem simians that are known from the same deposits in Africa, early Asian simians are thought to have dispersed from Asia to Africa more than once prior to the late middle Eocene. Such dispersals from Asia to Africa also were seen around the same time in other mammalian groups, including hystricognathous rodents and anthracotheres.

Afrasia is known from four isolated molar teeth found in the Pondaung Formation of Myanmar. These teeth are similar to those of Afrotarsius and Eosimiidae, and differ only in details of the chewing surface. For example, the back part of the third lower molar is relatively well-developed. In the Pondaung Formation, Afrasia was part of a diverse primate community that also includes the eosimiid Bahinia and members of the families Amphipithecidae and Sivaladapidae.

and 4 Related for: Afrasia djijidae information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8433 seconds.)

Afrasia djijidae

Last Update:

Afrasia djijidae is a fossil primate that lived in Myanmar approximately 37 million years ago, during the late middle Eocene. The only species in the genus...

Word Count : 3068

Afrotarsius

Last Update:

relationship between Afrotarsius and anthropoids. A second afrotarsiid genus, Afrasia, was named in 2012 from the Eocene Pondaung Formation of Myanmar. In the...

Word Count : 538

List of fossil primates

Last Update:

Xanthorhysis Beard, 1998 Xanthorhysis tabrumi Beard, 1998 Afrasia Chaimanee et al. 2012 Afrasia djijidae Chaimanee et al. 2012 Afrotarsius Simons & Bown, 1985...

Word Count : 5437

2012 in paleomammalogy

Last Update:

impala. Afrasia Gen. et sp. nov Valid Chaimanee et al. Eocene Pondaung Formation  Myanmar A primitive anthropoid. The type species is Afrasia djijidae. Afrodon...

Word Count : 4861

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net