Space Travel News  
Big Brains Arose Twice In Higher Primates

Fossil Chilecebus from South America. Credit: John Weinstein, The Field Museum
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 11, 2008
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.

"Primatologists have long suspected that increased encephalization may have arisen at different points in the primate evolutionary tree, but this is the first clear demonstration of independent brain size increase in New and Old World anthropoids," says Flynn of the paper that appeared in the Museum's publication Novitates this June. Encephalization is the increase in brain size relative to body size.

Animals with large encephalization quotients (E.Q.'s) are those with bigger brains relative to their body size in comparison to the average for an entire group. Most primates and dolphins have high E.Q.'s relative to other mammals, although some primates (especially apes and humans) have higher E.Q.'s than others.

At the heart of the new paper is the development of more accurate equations for estimating body size in platyrrhines, or New World "monkeys."

Most fossils are fragments of skulls or teeth so, to help in estimating their body size (and then E.Q.), Flynn and colleagues collected 80 measurements of the skulls, jaws, and teeth of 17 different species of living New World monkeys that ranged across the full spectrum of body sizes.

This study is one of the first to estimate body size with platyrrhines instead of their better-studied counterparts from the Old World, and this detailed analysis uses new statistical approaches to tease out which characteristics correlate best with body size. The goal is to apply this equation to fossilized specimens.

Chilecebus, found high in the Andes and described by Flynn and collaborators in 1995 in Nature, is one such fossil. The skull dates to 20 million years ago and is the oldest and most complete well-dated primate skull from the New World.

In the Novitates paper, Flynn and colleagues more accurately estimate that Chilecebus weighed about 583 grams and had an E.Q. of only 1.11-a much smaller relative brain size than any living New or Old World anthropoid, which have E.Q.'s ranging from 1.39-2.44 (and even higher for humans).

"The result is clear: early fossil members of both the New World and Old World anthropoid lineages had small brain sizes, thus the larger brain sizes seen in both groups today must have arisen independently," says Flynn.

"Documenting that large brains evolved separately several times within Primates will enhance understanding of the timing and pathways of brain expansion and its effects on skull growth and shape, and may lead to new insights into the genetic controls on encephalization."

Eric Delson, the Chair of Anthropology at Lehman College, City University of New York and a Research Associate at the Museum, concurs. "This work confirms that brain size increase may be one of the common characteristics of all primates," he says.

"The relatively small brain of Chilecebus contrasts with that of the slightly younger (16.5 million years ago), larger brained fossil Killikaike found in Argentina and described two years ago. It is probable that brain size also increased independently in the lemurs of Madagascar, as well as in the apes (of which humans are the extreme case) and the cercopithecid monkeys of Africa and Asia."

Related Links
American Museum of Natural History
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


US DoE Joint Genome Institute Announces New Genome Sequencing Projects
Walnut Creek CA (SPX) Jul 11, 2008
In the continuing effort to tap the vast, unexplored reaches of the earth's microbial and plant domains for bioenergy and environmental applications, the DOE Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI) has announced its latest portfolio of DNA sequencing projects that it will undertake in the coming year.







  • NASA Plans To Test Space Shuttle Replacement In Spring 2009
  • ATK Receives Contract For US Air Force Sounding Rocket Contract
  • SpaceX Conducts Static Test Firing Of Next Falcon 1 Rocket
  • Pratt And Whitney Rocketdyne Contract Option For Solar Thermal Propulsion Rocket Engine

  • Sea Launch To Put US Telecom Satellite In Orbit Next Week
  • ELA-3 Launch Zone Receives Its Fourth Ariane 5 Of 2008
  • Arianespace Launches ProtoStar I For Asian DTH Market
  • Inmarsat And ILS Set August 14 For Proton Flight With Inmarsat Satellite

  • NASA Sets Launch Dates For Remaining Space Shuttle Missions
  • NASA shuttle to take last flight in May 2010
  • Disaster plan in place for Hubble mission
  • US space shuttle lands safely after installing Japanese lab

  • Russian Soyuz Inspection Spacewalk Under Way
  • Station Crew Completes Spacewalk Preparations
  • NASA plans two ISS spacewalks next week
  • Shuttle astronauts bid farewell to space station crew

  • House Passes S And T Bills Commemorating NASA's 50th Anniversary, First Woman In Space
  • Magellan Aerospace Wins Lockheed Martin Orion Contract
  • NASA And ESA Complete Comparative Exploration Architecture Study
  • Secure World Foundation Receives United Nations Permanent Observer Status

  • China's Shenzhou VII Spacecraft Flown To Launch Center For October Takeoff
  • China Makes Breakthrough In Developing Next-Generation Long March Rocket
  • Shenzhou VII Research Crew Ready To Set Out For Launch Center
  • China's Shot Heard Around The Galaxy

  • Eight Teams Taking Up ESA's Lunar Robotics Challenge
  • Three Engineers, Hundreds of Robots, One Warehouse
  • Tartalo The Robot Is Knocking On Your Door
  • Sega, Hasbro unveil new dancing robot

  • Sample-Collection Tests By Phoenix Lander Continue
  • NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander Uses Soil Probe And Swiss Scope
  • Unlocking Martian Rocks
  • Phoenix Mars Lander Continues Sample-Collection Tests

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement