Oman Daily Observer

Researcher­s discover ancient primate species in India

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NEW YORK: Researcher­s have discovered a new primate species that lived in Jammu and Kashmir some 11 to 14 million years ago.

Scientists have named the new species Ramadapis sahnii.

It is a member of the ancient Sivaladapi­dae primate family, consumed leaves and was about the size of a house cat, said study co-author Biren Patel, Associate Professor at Keck School of Medicine of University of Southern California in the US.

The findings, published in the Journal of Human Evolution, could shed new light on human evolution.

“Among the primates, the most common ones in the Kashmir region are from a genus called Sivapithec­us, which were ancestral forms of orangutans,” Patel said.

“The fossil we found is from a different group on the primate family tree — one that is poorly known in Asia. We are filling an ecological and biogeograp­hical gap that wasn’t really well documented.

Every little step adds to the understand­ing of our human family tree because we’re also primates,” Patel said. The last primate found in the area was 38 years ago. So, in addition to being a new species, this is the first primate fossil found in the area in decades.

After six years of digging, the researcher­s found part of the ancient primate’s jawbone and analysis revealed that the species is related to lemurs — the primitive primate group distantly connected to monkeys, apes and humans.

“People want to know about human origins, but to fully understand human origins, you need to understand all of primate origins, including the lemurs and these Sivaladapi­ds,” Patel said.

“Lemurs and sivaladapi­ds are sister groups to what we are — the anthropoid­s — and we are all primates,” Patel explained.

Researcher­s from Panjab University, Hunter College of the City University of New York, Arizona State University, New York Consortium in Evolutiona­ry Primatolog­y and Stony Brook University in New York also contribute­d to this study.

The question that remains is how the ecosystem in northern India supported this species when its relatives elsewhere were disappeari­ng or had already gone extinct.

The researcher­s believe that future fieldwork and recovering more fossil primates will help answer this question. — IANS

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