A team of
scientists discovered recently North America’s
oldest primate fossil! The newly found species seems to have been so small that
it fitted in the palm of a hand.
Called
Teilhardina magnoliana, the tiny animal is very, very old and scientists have
also realized that it was related to similarly aged fossils from Europe, China, as well as from Wyoming’s
Big Horn Basin.
"They are
very, very primitive relatives of living primates called tarsiers, which live
today in Southeast Asia," said Christopher Beard, a paleontologist at the
Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. Beard and his team
discovered the fossils on the Gulf Coastal Plain of Mississippi.
According to
recent studies, it seems that Teilhardina magnoliana is 55 million years old.
The age of the layer of rock in which scientists found the fossils also
stressed on the fact that Teilhardina magnoliana’s fossil might really be North America’s oldest primate fossil.
The newly
discovered animal is said to have weighed no more than one ounce. The discovery
of its fossils proved that it had migrated from Asia to North
America across the Bering land bridge. Then the tiny animal
continued its migration to Europe across an
Atlantic land bridge, which appeared thousands of years later.
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