Ducrocq S
Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution, UMR 5554 CNRS, Case Courrier 064, Université Montpellier II, place E. Bataillon, Montpellier cedex 5, F-34095, France.
J Hum Evol. 1999 Jun;36(6):613-35. doi: 10.1006/jhev.1999.0291.
Dental remains of a late Eocene anthropoid primate from Thailand, Siamopithecus eocaenus, have been recently reported; complete description and comparisons of this material are given here. Siamopithecus displays several derived dental features that suggest close phylogenetic affinities among the Thai species, the Burmese Pondaungia, and the North African and Omani propliopithecines Aegyptopithecus and Moeripithecus. The geographic origin of anthropoid primates cannot be securely determined at present, but the available fossil record indicates that faunal exchanges between Africa and Southeast Asia were very probable during the Eocene, and that direct relationships between Asian and African anthropoid primates can be inferred.
最近报道了来自泰国的始新世晚期类人猿灵长类动物暹罗猿(Siamopithecus eocaenus)的牙齿化石;本文给出了该材料的完整描述和比较。暹罗猿显示出一些衍生的牙齿特征,这表明泰国物种、缅甸的邦当猿(Pondaungia)以及北非和阿曼的原上猿类埃及猿(Aegyptopithecus)和莫氏猿(Moeripithecus)之间存在密切的系统发育亲缘关系。目前尚无法确定类人猿灵长类动物的地理起源,但现有化石记录表明,在始新世期间,非洲和东南亚之间很可能存在动物群交流,并且可以推断出亚洲和非洲类人猿灵长类动物之间存在直接关系。