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Hot from press. Hope it will redirect the discussion on evolution going on in a wrong thread.
BBC News
SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
5 June 2013 Last updated at 13:06 ET
Tiny Chinese Archicebus fossil is oldest primate yet found
By Jonathan Amos
Science correspondent, BBC News
A mouse-sized fossil from China has provided remarkable new insights into the origin of primates.
At 55 million years old, it represents the earliest known member of this broad group of animals that includes humans.
Scientists have called the diminutive creature Archicebus, which roughly translates as "ancient monkey".
They tell Nature magazine that its skeleton helps explain the branching that occurred at the very base of the primate evolutionary tree.
The team puts Archicebus on the line leading to tarsiers, a collection of small arboreal animals now found exclusively in south-east Asia.
But its great age and primitive features mean Archicebus also has much to say about the emergence of the tarsiers' sister grouping - the anthropoids, the primates that include monkeys, apes and us.
And it would suggest that the first of these creatures were, likewise, petite forms scurrying through the tropical canopies that grew to cover the Earth shortly after the dinosaurs' extinction.
"We are all very curious about the ancestors of primates, including those of human beings," said Dr Xijun Ni from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
"From this almost complete skeleton, we can conclude that our ancestors were a kind of very small animal. It was very active and agile; and it lived in the trees and fed on insects," he told BBC News.
The Archicebus fossil is preserved across two slate slabs. Most of the animal's key bones are recorded, including exquisite impressions of its rear limbs and feet.
The specimen was originally discovered in the Jingzhou area of Hubei Province some 10 years ago by a local farmer, but Dr Ni and colleagues have deliberately taken their time to describe the creature and assess its importance.
Their investigation has included sending the delicate slate pieces to Grenoble, France, to be imaged at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF).
This giant machine uses brilliant X-rays to try to discern details of the skeleton that remain hidden inside the rock.
"There's no way you can prepare the fossil any better to see its features because you would end up with a powder; it's extremely fragile," explained the ESRF's Dr Paul Tafforeau. "But when you scan it with synchrotron light, you can virtually extract the bones without touching them. This gives you access to the general anatomy and we can achieve very high resolution."
The exhaustive study has allowed the scientists to build a picture of the type of animal Archicebus was in life, and to gauge its relationship to all other primates.
Many people may be taken aback by the animal's small size - a body just 71mm in length and an estimated weight of about 20-30g. But Archicebus gives us a good idea of what the very first primates on Earth would have looked like.
And they would have emerged in a pivotal period, said senior Nature editor Dr Henry Gee, when the planet was gripped in a period of outstanding global warming.
"At this time, 55 million years ago, the Earth was a jungle planet," he told BBC News. "The whole Earth was covered with tropical jungle - full of trees for little scampery things to climb up and down on. It was an ideal time for primates to be evolving."
Particular features of Archicebus' skeleton suggest it would have used a leap-and-grasp motion as it traversed through these great forests.
Its small pointy teeth indicate that it ate insects. Certainly, its size would have meant it had a high metabolic rate, and preying on insects would have satisfied its calorie needs.
And the creature's relatively large eye sockets suggest it had good vision for hunting, although the team says the evidence points towards Archicebus being a daytime operator, not a nocturnal animal.
One of the most significant observations is the shape of its heel bone. Far from being like a tarsier's calcaneus, the bone is more reminiscent of what one would expect in an anthropoid.
Dr Chris Beard from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, US, recalls: "The heel, and the foot in general, was one of the most shocking parts of the anatomy of this fossil when we first saw it; because, frankly, the foot of this fossil primate looks like a small monkey, specifically like a marmoset."
It emphasised, he said, Archicebus' proximity to the split in the two lineages.
"What it means is that the common ancestor of tarsiers and anthropoids had some features that looked more like anthropoids than tarsiers. And I guess we shouldn't be so surprised by this," he told BBC News.
Archicebus is placed right at the base of the tarsiers, which today are found in southeast Asia
Tarsiers and anthropoids (monkeys, apes and humans) belong to a primate clade known as the haplorhines (dry noses)
The strepsirhines (wet noses) are a more distant grouping that includes the famous lemurs of Madagascar
This clade also includes an extinct collection of primates that scientists refer to as the adapids
One of its members, "Ida" (Darwinius), was proposed back in 2009 to be at the base of the primate lineage
The wider scientific community rejected this interpretation and placed the 47-million-year-old Ida squarely with the adapids
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos
BBC News
SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
5 June 2013 Last updated at 13:06 ET
Tiny Chinese Archicebus fossil is oldest primate yet found
By Jonathan Amos
Science correspondent, BBC News
A mouse-sized fossil from China has provided remarkable new insights into the origin of primates.
At 55 million years old, it represents the earliest known member of this broad group of animals that includes humans.
Scientists have called the diminutive creature Archicebus, which roughly translates as "ancient monkey".
They tell Nature magazine that its skeleton helps explain the branching that occurred at the very base of the primate evolutionary tree.
The team puts Archicebus on the line leading to tarsiers, a collection of small arboreal animals now found exclusively in south-east Asia.
But its great age and primitive features mean Archicebus also has much to say about the emergence of the tarsiers' sister grouping - the anthropoids, the primates that include monkeys, apes and us.
And it would suggest that the first of these creatures were, likewise, petite forms scurrying through the tropical canopies that grew to cover the Earth shortly after the dinosaurs' extinction.
"We are all very curious about the ancestors of primates, including those of human beings," said Dr Xijun Ni from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
"From this almost complete skeleton, we can conclude that our ancestors were a kind of very small animal. It was very active and agile; and it lived in the trees and fed on insects," he told BBC News.
The Archicebus fossil is preserved across two slate slabs. Most of the animal's key bones are recorded, including exquisite impressions of its rear limbs and feet.
The specimen was originally discovered in the Jingzhou area of Hubei Province some 10 years ago by a local farmer, but Dr Ni and colleagues have deliberately taken their time to describe the creature and assess its importance.
Their investigation has included sending the delicate slate pieces to Grenoble, France, to be imaged at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF).
This giant machine uses brilliant X-rays to try to discern details of the skeleton that remain hidden inside the rock.
"There's no way you can prepare the fossil any better to see its features because you would end up with a powder; it's extremely fragile," explained the ESRF's Dr Paul Tafforeau. "But when you scan it with synchrotron light, you can virtually extract the bones without touching them. This gives you access to the general anatomy and we can achieve very high resolution."
The exhaustive study has allowed the scientists to build a picture of the type of animal Archicebus was in life, and to gauge its relationship to all other primates.
Many people may be taken aback by the animal's small size - a body just 71mm in length and an estimated weight of about 20-30g. But Archicebus gives us a good idea of what the very first primates on Earth would have looked like.
And they would have emerged in a pivotal period, said senior Nature editor Dr Henry Gee, when the planet was gripped in a period of outstanding global warming.
"At this time, 55 million years ago, the Earth was a jungle planet," he told BBC News. "The whole Earth was covered with tropical jungle - full of trees for little scampery things to climb up and down on. It was an ideal time for primates to be evolving."
Particular features of Archicebus' skeleton suggest it would have used a leap-and-grasp motion as it traversed through these great forests.
Its small pointy teeth indicate that it ate insects. Certainly, its size would have meant it had a high metabolic rate, and preying on insects would have satisfied its calorie needs.
And the creature's relatively large eye sockets suggest it had good vision for hunting, although the team says the evidence points towards Archicebus being a daytime operator, not a nocturnal animal.
One of the most significant observations is the shape of its heel bone. Far from being like a tarsier's calcaneus, the bone is more reminiscent of what one would expect in an anthropoid.
Dr Chris Beard from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, US, recalls: "The heel, and the foot in general, was one of the most shocking parts of the anatomy of this fossil when we first saw it; because, frankly, the foot of this fossil primate looks like a small monkey, specifically like a marmoset."
It emphasised, he said, Archicebus' proximity to the split in the two lineages.
"What it means is that the common ancestor of tarsiers and anthropoids had some features that looked more like anthropoids than tarsiers. And I guess we shouldn't be so surprised by this," he told BBC News.
Archicebus is placed right at the base of the tarsiers, which today are found in southeast Asia
Tarsiers and anthropoids (monkeys, apes and humans) belong to a primate clade known as the haplorhines (dry noses)
The strepsirhines (wet noses) are a more distant grouping that includes the famous lemurs of Madagascar
This clade also includes an extinct collection of primates that scientists refer to as the adapids
One of its members, "Ida" (Darwinius), was proposed back in 2009 to be at the base of the primate lineage
The wider scientific community rejected this interpretation and placed the 47-million-year-old Ida squarely with the adapids
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos