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Jemezius,a new omomyid primate from the early Eocene of northwestern New Mexico
Institution:Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205 U.S.A.
Abstract:Recently collected omomyid primate fossils from the early Eocene Regina Member, San Jose Formation, San Juan Basin, New Mexico, add significant new information to our knowledge of the family in the southern part of the Rocky Mountain region during Wasatchian time. A total of seven specimens represent at least two omomyid species on the basis of size alone, but only the larger of these species, here described as Jemezius szalayi, gen. et sp. nov., is currently known from sufficient material to permit an adequate taxonomic assignment. Jemezius possesses several traits in common with Uintanius that clearly reflect a close phylogenetic relationship between these genera, but lacks the specialized premolar hypertrophy characteristic of that genus. The presence of uintaniinin omomyids in New Mexico during the middle Wasatchian, well before their first appearance in Wyoming during Bridgerian time, supports the hypothesis that several of the exotic mammals that first appear in Wyoming near the Wasatchian-Bridgerian boundary may be immigrant taxa from the south.
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