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Hominid and gelada baboon evolution: Agreement between molecular and fossil time scales
Authors:John E. Cronin  W. E. Meikle
Affiliation:(1) Departments of Anthropology and Organismal and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts;(2) Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, 94720 Berkeley, California
Abstract:The time of origin of the hominid lineage has long been debated. Macromolecular studies have consistently shown genetic distances between living humans and African apes to be quite small. The molecular clock hypothesis proposes that the time of separation of these lineages is relatively recent (in the range of 4–8 million years ago) and not 15 million years or more ago as usually suggested. Three independent molecular comparisons yield a mean estimate of 4.6 million years for the hominid-African pongid divergence. The relationship of Theropithecusand Papiois a parallel case within Primates of two taxa which are quite similar at the molecular level, but which are usually thought to have separated relatively long ago. The two cases of seeming discordance between different lines of evidence are analogous. Each involves a speciation event which eventually resulted in one substantially derived lineage and one or more relatively unchanged lineages. In each case, claims of the antiquity of the divergence event extend to at least twice the age of the first certain appearance of the more derived lineage in the fossil record. Finally, in each case, the molecular clock model suggests a range of possible divergence times that overlaps with the first appearances of undoubted hominids and Theropithecusin the fossil record. This test involving paleontological evidence supports the molecular clock hypothesis.
Keywords:hominid-pongid divergence  molecular clocks  Theropithecus  cladistics
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