A new primate community from the earliest Oligocene of the Atlantic margin of Northwest Africa: Systematic, paleobiogeographic, and paleoenvironmental implications

IF 3.1 1区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Laurent Marivaux , Mohamed Benammi , Lahssen Baidder , Omar Saddiqi , Sylvain Adnet , Anne-Lise Charruault , Rodolphe Tabuce , Johan Yans , Mouloud Benammi
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Abstract

We report a new Paleogene primate community discovered in the uppermost part of the Samlat Formation outcropping on the continental shore of the Rio de Oro, east of the Dakhla peninsula (in the south of Morocco, near the northern border of Mauritania). Fossils consist of isolated teeth, which were extracted by wet screening of estuarine sediments (DAK C2) dating from the earliest Oligocene (ca. 33.5 Ma). These dental remains testify to the presence of at least eight primate species, documenting distinct families, four of which are among the Anthropoidea (Oligopithecidae [Catopithecus aff. browni], Propliopithecidae [?Propliopithecus sp.], Parapithecidae [Abuqatrania cf. basiodontos], and Afrotarsiidae [Afrotarsius sp.]) and four in the Strepsirrhini (a Djebelemuridae [cf. ‘Anchomomysmilleri], a Galagidae [Wadilemur cf. elegans], a possible lorisiform [Orogalago saintexuperyi gen. et sp. nov.], and a strepsirrhine of indeterminate affinities [Orolemur mermozi gen. et sp. nov.]). This record of various primates at Dakhla represents the first Oligocene primate community from Northwest Africa, especially from the Atlantic margin of that landmass. Considering primates plus rodents (especially hystricognaths), the taxonomic proximity at the generic (even specific) level between DAK C2 (Dakhla) and the famous Egyptian fossil-bearing localities of the Jebel Qatrani Formation (Fayum Depression), either dating from the latest Eocene (L-41) or from the early Oligocene, suggests the existence of an east–west ‘trans-North African’ environmental continuum during the latest Eocene–earliest Oligocene time interval. The particularly diverse mammal fauna from DAK C2, recorded within the time window of global climate deterioration characterizing the Eocene/Oligocene transition, suggests that this tropical region of northwest Africa was seemingly less affected, if at all, by the cooling and associated paleoenvironmental and biotic changes documented at that time or at least that the effects were delayed. The expected densely forested paleoenvironment bordering the western margin of North Africa at the beginning of the early Oligocene probably offered better tropical refugia than higher latitudes or more inland areas during the cooling episode.

西北非洲大西洋边缘最早渐新世的一个新灵长类群落:系统、古生物地理学和古环境的影响
我们报告了在达赫拉半岛东部(摩洛哥南部,靠近毛里塔尼亚北部边界)里奥德奥罗大陆海岸出露的萨姆拉特地层最上层发现的一个新的古新世灵长类群落。化石由孤立的牙齿组成,这些牙齿是通过对河口沉积物(DAK C2)进行湿法筛选提取的,可追溯到最早的渐新世(约 33.5 千兆年)。这些牙齿残骸证明了至少八个灵长类物种的存在,记录了不同的科,其中四个属于Anthropoidea科(Oligopithecidae[Catopithecus aff. browni]、Propliopithecidae[?Propliopithecus sp.]、Parapithecidae[Abuqatrania cf. basiodontos]和Afrotarsiidae[Afrotarsius sp.)和四种链臀目动物(一种 Djebelemuridae [cf. 'Anchomys' milleri]、一种 Galagidae [Wadilemur cf. elegans]、一种可能的长尾猴[Orogalago saintexuperyi gen. et sp. nov.]和一种亲缘关系不明的链臀目动物[Orolemur mermozi gen. et sp. nov.])。达赫拉各种灵长类动物的这一记录代表了非洲西北部,特别是该大陆大西洋边缘地区的第一个渐新世灵长类群落。考虑到灵长类动物和啮齿类动物(尤其是歇后腿类),DAK C2(达赫拉)与埃及著名的杰贝勒卡特拉尼地层(法尤姆洼地)化石产地(可追溯到始新世晚期(L-41)或渐新世早期)之间在类属(甚至特异)分类学层面的相似性表明,在始新世晚期至渐新世早期的时间间隔内,存在着一个东西向的 "横跨北非 "环境连续体。在始新世/渐新世过渡时期全球气候恶化的时间窗口内记录的 DAK C2 哺乳动物群特别多样化,这表明非洲西北部的这一热带地区受到当时记录的降温及相关古环境和生物变化的影响似乎较小,或者至少是延迟了。在渐新世早期,北非西缘预计的森林茂密的古环境可能比高纬度或内陆地区在降温过程中提供了更好的热带避难所。
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Evolution
Journal of Human Evolution 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
15.60%
发文量
104
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Human Evolution concentrates on publishing the highest quality papers covering all aspects of human evolution. The central focus is aimed jointly at paleoanthropological work, covering human and primate fossils, and at comparative studies of living species, including both morphological and molecular evidence. These include descriptions of new discoveries, interpretative analyses of new and previously described material, and assessments of the phylogeny and paleobiology of primate species. Submissions should address issues and questions of broad interest in paleoanthropology.
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