Journal
PRIMATES
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 311-319Publisher
SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10329-009-0151-4
Keywords
Miocene; Rangwapithecus; Proconsul; Elbow anatomy
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Funding
- National Museums of Kenya (Nairobi)
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New early Miocene forelimb fossils have been recovered from the Songhor and Lower Kapurtay localities in southwestern Kenya. We describe four specimens that are similar in size and functional capabilities. Their specific allocation is problematic but these forelimb specimens must belong to either Rangwapithecus gordoni or Proconsul africanus. If these new postcranial specimens should belong to R. gordoni, on the basis of size and common dental specimens found at Songhor, they represent a new elbow complex. The morphology of these fossils is anatomically and functionally similar to that of Proconsul. The proconsuloid elbow complex allows extensive forelimb rotations and is capable of performing arboreal quadrupedalism and climbing activities. No suspensory adaptations are apparent. The proconsuloid elbow complex remains a good ancestral condition for hominoid primates.
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