Simons Elwyn L, Seiffert Erik R, Ryan Timothy M, Attia Yousry
Department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy and Duke Lemur Center, Division of Fossil Primates, Duke University, 1013 Broad Street, Durham, NC 27705, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 May 22;104(21):8731-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0703129104. Epub 2007 May 15.
The most complete and best-preserved cranium of a Paleogene anthropoid ever found, that of a small female of the early Oligocene ( approximately 29-30 Ma) stem catarrhine species Aegyptopithecus zeuxis, was recovered from the Jebel Qatrani Formation (Fayum Depression, Egypt) in 2004. The specimen is that of a subadult and, in craniodental dimensions, is the smallest Aegyptopithecus individual known. High-resolution computed tomographic (microCT) scanning of the specimen's well preserved cranial vault confirms that Aegyptopithecus had relatively unexpanded frontal lobes and a brain-to-body mass ratio lower than those of living anthropoids. MicroCT scans of a male cranium recovered in 1966 [Egyptian Geological Museum, Cairo (CGM) 40237] reveal that previous estimates of its endocranial volume were too large. Thus, some amount of encephalization evolved independently in platyrrhine and catarrhine anthropoids, and the relative brain size of the last common ancestor of crown Anthropoidea was probably strepsirrhine-like or smaller. A. zeuxis shows extreme sexual dimorphism in craniodental morphology (apparently to a degree otherwise seen only in some highly dimorphic Miocene catarrhines), and the crania of female Aegyptopithecus lack a number of morphological features seen in larger males that have been accorded phylogenetic significance in catarrhine systematics (e.g., a well developed rostrum, elongate sagittal crest, and frontal trigon). Although a unique pattern of craniofacial sexual dimorphism may have characterized advanced stem and basal crown catarrhines, expression of various allegedly "discrete" craniofacial features may have been intraspecifically variable in early catarrhine species due to high levels of dimorphism and so should be treated with caution in phylogenetic analyses.
2004年,在埃及法尤姆凹陷的杰贝勒卡特拉尼组发现了迄今发现的最完整、保存最完好的古近纪类人猿颅骨,它属于渐新世早期(约2900 - 3000万年前)一种小型雌性的原猴亚目干鼻猴物种——埃及猿。该标本是亚成体,在颅齿尺寸方面是已知最小的埃及猿个体。对该标本保存完好的颅顶进行高分辨率计算机断层扫描(显微CT)证实,埃及猿的额叶相对未扩张,脑体质量比低于现存类人猿。对1966年发现的雄性颅骨进行的显微CT扫描[开罗埃及地质博物馆(CGM)40237]显示,之前对其颅内容积的估计过大。因此,阔鼻猴类和狭鼻猴类类人猿的某种程度的脑化是独立演化的,冠类人猿最后一个共同祖先的相对脑大小可能类似狐猴或更小。埃及猿在颅齿形态上表现出极端的两性异形(显然在某种程度上,只有一些高度两性异形的中新世狭鼻猴才有这种情况),雌性埃及猿的颅骨缺乏一些在较大雄性中可见的形态特征,这些特征在狭鼻猴系统发育中具有系统发育意义(例如,发育良好的吻部、细长的矢状嵴和额三角)。尽管独特的颅面两性异形模式可能是进步的干鼻猴类和基部冠类狭鼻猴的特征,但由于早期狭鼻猴物种中存在高度的两性异形,各种所谓“离散”的颅面特征在种内可能存在变异,因此在系统发育分析中应谨慎对待。