Fossil Skeleton Known as Ida Is No Ancestor of Humans
Remember Ida, the fossil discovery announced last May with its own book and television documentary? A publicity blitz called it “the link” that would reveal the earliest evolutionary roots of monkeys, apes and humans.
Experts protested that Ida was not even a close relative. And now a new analysis supports their reaction.
In fact, Ida is as far removed from the monkey-ape-human ancestry as a primate could be, says Erik Seiffert of Stony Brook University in New York.
Dr. Seiffert and his colleagues compared 360 specific anatomical features of 117 living and extinct primate species to draw up a family tree. They report the results in Thursday’s issue of the journal Nature.
Ida is a skeleton of a 47-million-year-old cat-size creature found in Germany. It starred in a book, “The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor.”
Ida represents a previously unknown primate species called Darwinius. The scientists who formally announced the finding said they were not claiming Darwinius to be a direct ancestor of monkeys, apes and humans. But they did argue that it belonged in the same major evolutionary grouping and that it showed what an actual ancestor of that era might have looked like...
Read entire article at NYT
Experts protested that Ida was not even a close relative. And now a new analysis supports their reaction.
In fact, Ida is as far removed from the monkey-ape-human ancestry as a primate could be, says Erik Seiffert of Stony Brook University in New York.
Dr. Seiffert and his colleagues compared 360 specific anatomical features of 117 living and extinct primate species to draw up a family tree. They report the results in Thursday’s issue of the journal Nature.
Ida is a skeleton of a 47-million-year-old cat-size creature found in Germany. It starred in a book, “The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor.”
Ida represents a previously unknown primate species called Darwinius. The scientists who formally announced the finding said they were not claiming Darwinius to be a direct ancestor of monkeys, apes and humans. But they did argue that it belonged in the same major evolutionary grouping and that it showed what an actual ancestor of that era might have looked like...