Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published November 2012 | public
Journal Article

A platyrrhine talus from the early Miocene of Peru (Amazonian Madre de Dios Sub-Andean Zone)

Abstract

The earliest platyrrhines have been documented from the late Oligocene of Bolivia (Salla) and from the early and early middle Miocene of middle and high latitudes (central Chile and Argentinean Patagonia). Recent paleontological field expeditions in Peruvian Amazonia (Atalaya, Cusco; Upper Madre de Dios Basin) have led to the discovery of a new early Miocene locality termed MD-61 ('Pinturan' biochronological unit, ∼18.75–16.5 Ma [millions of years ago]). Associated with the typical Pinturan dinomyid rodent Scleromys quadrangulatus, we found a well-preserved right talus of a small-bodied anthropoid primate (MUSM-2024). This new platyrrhine postcranial element displays a combination of talar features primarily found among the Cebidae, and more especially in the Cebinae. Its size approximates that of the talus of some living large marmosets or small tamarins (Cebidae, Callitrichinae). MUSM-2024 would thus document a tiny Saimiri-like cebine, with the body size of a large marmoset. Functionally, the features and proportions of MUSM-2024 indicate that this small primate was arboreal and primarily quadrupedal, agile, with frequent horizontal leaping and vertical clinging in its locomotor repertoire. This small talus is the first platyrrhine fossil to be found from Peru and the earliest primate fossil from northern South America. This new early Miocene taxon could be a stem cebid, thereby providing new evidence on the existence of some long-lived clades of modern platyrrhines.

Additional Information

We thank the IRD-PeruPetro Convention Programme. We are much indebted to Dan Gebo (Northern Illinois University, DeKalb) for his courtesy in providing us with measurements of several fossil tali. We are grateful to C. Zollikofer and M. Ponce de León (Anthropological Institute and Museum, Zurich), C. Denys and J. Cuisin (Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris), V. Pacheco (Departamento de Mastozoología, MUSM, Lima, Peru), and S. Jiquel (ISE-M, Collections Université Montpellier 2) for having provided access to their collections and permission to scan and/or mold extant specimens. We thank R. Lebrun (ISE-M) for access to the Micro-CT scanner facility of the Montpellier RIO-Imaging and A. G. Kramarz (MACN, Buenos Aires) for having provided us with useful references concerning Pinturan dinomyid rodents. Many thanks to A.-L. Charruault (ISE-M) for Micro-CT surface reconstructions of the tali of living platyrrhine species. We are indebted to R.F. Kay, M.T. Silcox and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive remarks on an earlier version of the manuscript. L. Marivaux was supported by ANR-08-JCJC-0017 (PALASIAFRICA); P.-O. Antoine was supported by CNRS 'Eclipse 2', CNRS/INSU/IRD 'Paleo2' and Toulouse University 'SPAM'; G. Billet was supported by Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation. Contribution ISE-M 2012-090.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023