The assessment of the bones belonging to ancient rat-sized, tree-dwelling primates, bolsters the controversial idea that primates native to what is now India played an important role in the very early evolution of mammals that include humans, apes and monkeys, researchers said.
"All other primate bones found so far around the world clearly belong to one or the other of the two primate groups, called clades: Strepsirrhini and Haplorhini," said Kenneth Rose, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in the US.
According to Rose and lead author Rachel Dunn from Des Moines University in the US, this suggests that the little primates represent a very early stage of primate evolution.
At the beginning of the Eocene Epoch, about 56 million years ago, the world was warming, encouraging the dispersal of mammals between northern continents.
The oldest known primate fossils found appeared around then in North America, Europe and northern Asia, but they can already be categorised as either adapoids or omomyids, the most primitive members of Strepsirrhini and Haplorhini, respectively.
They are also more primitive than a relatively complete skeleton of the primate Archicebus, found recently in China and dated to about 55 million years ago, said researchers, including those from Garhwal University and Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology in Uttarakhand, and Panjab University in Chandigarh.
Their analysis, Rose said, suggests the Gujarat primates are close descendants of the common ancestor that gave rise to the adapoids and omomyids found on the northern continents.
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