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  2. Arboreal theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arboreal_theory

    The arboreal theory claims that primates evolved from their ancestors by adapting to arboreal life. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was proposed by Grafton Elliot Smith (1912), a neuroanatomist who was chiefly concerned with the emergence of the primate brain.

  3. Matt Cartmill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Cartmill

    The Orbits of Arboreal Mammals: A Reassessment of the Arboreal Theory of Primate Evolution (1970) Matthew Cartmill is an American anthropologist and professor of anthropology in the College of Arts and Sciences at Boston University , where he formerly served as Chair of Anthropology.

  4. Evolution of primates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_primates

    Other similar basal primates were widespread in Eurasia and Africa during the tropical conditions of the Paleocene and Eocene. Purgatorius is the genus of the four extinct species believed to be the earliest example of a primate or a proto-primate, a primatomorph precursor to the Plesiadapiformes, dating to as old as 66 million years ago.

  5. Primate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primate

    These features are more developed in monkeys and apes, and noticeably less so in lorises and lemurs. Some primates, including gorillas, humans and baboons, are primarily ground-dwelling rather than arboreal, but all species have adaptations for climbing trees.

  6. Frederic Wood Jones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederic_Wood_Jones

    The tarsian hypothesis of Jones, which he held to from 1918 [13] until his death, claimed that the human line of development did not diverge from that of apes or monkeys but from much earlier, before the Oligocene 30 million years ago, from a common ancestor with a primitive primate group of which the only other survivor is the Tarsier. [14]

  7. Vertical clinging and leaping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertical_clinging_and_leaping

    Galago leaping. Vertical clinging and leaping (VCL) is a type of arboreal locomotion seen most commonly among the strepsirrhine primates and haplorrhine tarsiers.The animal begins at rest with its torso upright and elbows fixed, with both hands clinging to a vertical support, such as the side of a tree or bamboo stalk.

  8. Flying primate hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_primate_hypothesis

    Pettigrew suggested that flying foxes, colugos, and primates were all descendants of the same group of early arboreal mammals. The megabat flight and the colugo gliding could be both seen as locomotory adaptations to a life high above the ground. The flying primate hypothesis met resistance from many zoologists.

  9. Savannah hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah_hypothesis

    The savannah hypothesis (or savanna hypothesis) is a hypothesis that human bipedalism evolved as a direct result of human ancestors' transition from an arboreal lifestyle to one on the savannas. According to the hypothesis, hominins left the woodlands that had previously been their natural habitat millions of years ago and adapted to their new ...