Oligopithecus savagei
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Oligopithecus savagei Fossil range: Early Oligocene |
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||||||||
†Oligopithecus savagei |
Oligopithecus savagei is a fossil primate that lived in Africa during the Early Oligocene. This species is only known from one jaw bone and was found in Egypt. As a propliopithecoid, it is older than the ape and New World monkey split, yet is more related to either of those groups than it is to any other primates.
[edit] Morphology
Oligopithecus savagei has a dental formula of ?:1:2:3 on the lower jaw. The canine is relatively small and the front premolar is narrow. It also resembles the callitrichines more than the catarrhines. The lower third premolar is sectorial. Oligopithecus savagei has primitive molars as compared to other haplorrhines. The lower molars have a trigonid which is higher than the talonid. The lower molars also have a long and obliquely directed cristid obliqua and a small paraconid on the first molar. The lower molars of this species had sharply defined and high occlusal crests and cusps. Based upon the jaw bone, Oligopithecus savagei had a body mass of 1.5 kilograms.
[edit] Range
Oligopithecus savagei was found in Africa and discovered in the country of Egypt.