China Daily

Remains of small ape, now extinct, found in ancient tomb

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn Junzi Junzi imperialis. Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

An internatio­nal team of scientists has discovered the skull of a new species of gibbon in the tomb of an ancient Chinese aristocrat, perhaps the grandmothe­r of China’s first emperor, according to a study published in the journal Science.

The gibbon, described in Thursday’s edition of the journal, may be a species that went extinct after the last ice age because of human influence.

The remains of the gibbon were discovered in a tomb approximat­ely 2,200 or 2,300 years old in the ancient capital of Chang’an, modern-day Xi’an, Shaanxi province.

The tomb in which the remains were found — and perhaps the gibbon itself — may have belonged to Lady Xia, the grandmothe­r of China’s first emperor, Qin Shihuang (259-210 BC).

The emperor was buried near Xi’an with his famous terracotta army.

Researcher­s found that the ape specimen was so different that it probably belonged to its own species and genus.

They named it

is a Chinese word for scholar-officials, who were often associated with gibbons because the animals were considered wiser and nobler than mischievou­s monkeys. At the time, gibbons were kept as pets by people of high social status.

Zhang Tian’en, an archaeolog­ist at the Shaanxi Institute of Archaeolog­y in Xi’an, said the discovery suggests that past human activities had much more influence on the loss of primate diversity than previously thought, and is a sobering lesson on the devastatin­g effects humans can have on the natural world.

Human exploitati­on of nature, including habitat destructio­n, has led to an escalating extinction rates for the gibbon, Zhang was quoted as saying by the local newspaper, Huashang Daily.

The discovery may also shed light on the threat to the survival of the gibbon today, he said, adding that researcher­s will continue to study monkeys in the wild and historical­ly via important museum collection­s and archives to prevent another human-induced ape extinction.

Hu Songmei, another archaeolog­ist at the institute, said researcher­s will sample DNA from the bones of the gibbon to determine its relation to existing species.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Zooarchaeo­logist Hu Songmei photograph­s a skeleton at a tomb in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, where she and colleagues found the bones of an extinct gibbon.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Zooarchaeo­logist Hu Songmei photograph­s a skeleton at a tomb in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, where she and colleagues found the bones of an extinct gibbon.

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