Big brains arose twice in higher primates

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Fossil Chilecebus from South America. Credit: John Weinstein The Field Museum
Fossil Chilecebus from South America. Credit: John Weinstein, The Field Museum

After taking a fresh look at an old fossil, John Flynn, Frick Curator of Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History, and colleagues determined that the brains of the ancestors of modern Neotropical primates were as small as those of their early fossil simian counterparts in the Old World. This means one of the hallmarks of primate biology, increased brain size, arose independently in isolated groups—the platyrrhines of the Americas and the catarrhines of Africa and Eurasia.


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All News summaries for July 09, 2008