top of page
Search

Here's What the Last Common Ancestor of Apes and Humans Looked Like (Live Science)

  • Writer: Chris Gilbert
    Chris Gilbert
  • Aug 11, 2017
  • 1 min read

Updated: Mar 6, 2018




The most complete extinct-ape skull ever found reveals what the last common ancestor of all living apes and humans might have looked like, according to a new study.

The 13-million-year-old infant skull, which its discoverers nicknamed "Alesi," was unearthed in Kenya in 2014. It likely belonged to a fruit-eating, slow-climbing primate that resembled a baby gibbon, the researchers said.


Among the living primates, humans are most closely related to the apes, which include the lesser apes (gibbons) and the great apes (chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans). These so-called hominoids — that is, the gibbons, great apes and humans — emerged and diversified during the Miocene epoch, approximately 23 million to 5 million years ago. (The last common ancestor that humans had with chimpanzees lived about 6 million to 7 million years ago.)


Read more: https://www.livescience.com/60093-last-common-ancestor-of-apes-humans-revealed.html


 
 
 

Comments


Christopher C. Gilbert

cgilbert@hunter.cuny.edu

Tel: (212) 396-6578
Fax: (212) 772-5423
Room: HN 725 

Department of Anthropology

Hunter College

bottom of page