Journal ArticleScience advances · January 2025
Through selective breeding, humans have driven exceptional morphological diversity in domestic dogs, creating more than 200 recognized breeds developed for specialized functional tasks such as herding, protection, and hunting. Here, we use three-dimensiona ...
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Journal ArticleAmeghiniana · January 1, 2022
We describe a well-preserved humerus of Homunculus patagonicus, a stem platyrrhine from the late early Miocene of the Santa Cruz Formation, Santa Cruz Province, Argentina. The distal part of a humerus was collected by Carlos Ameghino and figured in the 19< ...
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Journal ArticleArchaeological and Anthropological Sciences · May 1, 2021
Ivory anatomical figurines are thought to have been carved in Germany in the seventeenth or eighteenth century. While it is speculated that these figurines were used for the study of medical education, little is known about their origins. A precise underst ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of visualized experiments : JoVE · January 2019
Facial expressions, or facial displays, of social or emotional intent are produced by many mammalian taxa as a means of visually communicating with conspecifics at a close range. These displays are achieved by contraction of the mimetic muscles, which are ...
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Journal ArticlePloS one · January 2019
Scientific study of lemurs, a group of primates found only on Madagascar, is crucial for understanding primate evolution. Unfortunately, lemurs are among the most endangered animals in the world, so there is a strong impetus to maximize as much scientific ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of the Royal Society, Interface · September 2018
The talus is one of the most commonly preserved post-cranial elements in the platyrrhine fossil record. Talar morphology can provide information about postural adaptations because it is the anatomical structure responsible for transmitting body mass forces ...
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Journal ArticleBiological Journal of the Linnean Society · August 1, 2018
Primates are generally characterized by low-crowned, brachydont molars relative to many other groups of mammals. This conservative architecture may create special challenges for maintaining dental functionality in the case of a diet requiring proficient sh ...
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Journal ArticleThe Journal of experimental biology · November 2017
Whole-body transparency, an effective camouflage strategy in many aquatic species, can be disrupted by environmental and/or physiological stressors. We found that tail-flip escape responses temporarily disrupt the transparency of the anemone shrimp Ancy ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of human evolution · October 2017
Platyrrhines are a diverse group of primates that presently occupy a broad range of tropical-equatorial environments in the Americas. However, most of the fossil platyrrhine species of the early Miocene have been found at middle and high latitudes. Althoug ...
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Chapter · 2016
In this book, the authors present new research findings from sixty of the world's leading Neotropical primate scientists in order to bridge this information gap. ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican journal of physical anthropology · July 2015
ObjectiveMultiple meaningful ecological characterizations of a species revolve around body mass. Because body mass cannot be directly measured in extinct taxa, reliable body mass predictors are needed. Many published body mass prediction equations ...
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Journal ArticleAnatomical record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007) · January 2015
Three-dimensional geometric morphometric (3DGM) methods for placing landmarks on digitized bones have become increasingly sophisticated in the last 20 years, including greater degrees of automation. One aspect shared by all 3DGM methods is that the researc ...
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Journal ArticleISRN Zoology · October 8, 2013
The domestication of the dog has been a ripe area of evolutionary speculation for more than 150 years. A wolf ancestry and probable East Asian origin of domestication are now widely accepted. We offer a new allopatric hypothesis for the domesticati ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican journal of physical anthropology · July 2013
A well-preserved calcaneus referrable to Proteopithecus sylviae from the late Eocene Quarry L-41 in the Fayum Depression, Egypt, provides new evidence relevant to this taxon's uncertain phylogenetic position. We assess morphological affinities of the new s ...
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Journal ArticlePloS one · January 2013
Specialized acrobatic leaping has been recognized as a key adaptive trait tied to the origin and subsequent radiation of euprimates based on its observed frequency in extant primates and inferred frequency in extinct early euprimates. Hypothesized skeletal ...
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