• The reconstructed cranium of Pierolapithecus and the evolution of the g

    From Primum Sapienti@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 30 15:01:10 2023
    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2218778120
    The reconstructed cranium of Pierolapithecus and
    the evolution of the great ape face

    Significance
    One of the persistent issues in studies of ape and
    human evolution is that the fossil record is
    fragmentary and many specimens are incompletely
    preserved and/or distorted. This makes it difficult
    to reach a consensus on the evolutionary
    relationships of key fossil apes that are essential
    to understanding ape and human evolution. Here, we
    reconstruct the face of Pierolapithecus catalaunicus
    and analyze its morphology in an evolutionary
    framework. Our results are consistent with the
    hypothesis that this species represents a basal
    member of the group including great apes and humans,
    and provide insight into the facial morphology of
    the ancestor of the group.

    Abstract
    Pierolapithecus catalaunicus (~12 million years ago,
    northeastern Spain) is key to understanding the
    mosaic nature of hominid (great ape and human)
    evolution. Notably, its skeleton indicates that an
    orthograde (upright) body plan preceded suspensory
    adaptations in hominid evolution. However, there is
    ongoing debate about this species, partly because
    the sole known cranium, preserving a nearly
    complete face, suffers from taphonomic damage. We
    1) carried out a micro computerized tomography (CT)
    based virtual reconstruction of the Pierolapithecus
    cranium, 2) assessed its morphological affinities
    using a series of two-dimensional (2D) and
    three-dimensional (3D) morphometric analyses, and
    3) modeled the evolution of key aspects of ape face
    form. The reconstruction clarifies many aspects of
    the facial morphology of Pierolapithecus. Our
    results indicate that it is most similar to great
    apes (fossil and extant) in overall face shape and
    size and is morphologically distinct from other
    Middle Miocene apes. Crown great apes can be
    distinguished from other taxa in several facial
    metrics (e.g., low midfacial prognathism,
    relatively tall faces) and only some of these
    features are found in Pierolapithecus, which is
    most consistent with a stem (basal) hominid
    position. The inferred morphology at all ancestral
    nodes within the hominoid (ape and human) tree is
    closer to great apes than to hylobatids (gibbons
    and siamangs), which are convergent with other
    smaller anthropoids. Our analyses support a
    hominid ancestor that was distinct from all extant
    and fossil hominids in overall facial shape and
    shared many features with Pierolapithecus. This
    reconstructed ancestral morphotype represents a
    testable hypothesis that can be reevaluated as
    new fossils are discovered.


    The reconstruction in the figures is amazing.

    "While it is broadly accepted that
    Pierolapithecus represents a hominid, and our
    results support this hypothesis, the question of
    its relationship to extant hominid subfamilies
    is more contentious."

    "...the inferred position of the hominid node
    in the 3D phylomorphospace (Fig. 3) suggests
    that, in overall facial shape, the hominid LCA
    is perhaps closer to Gorilla or Pongo than to
    Pan or Pierolapithecus."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)