Characterization of inner craniodental structures in cercopithecoids and diachronic study of their morphological variation in the Plio-pleistocene south African sequence

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The temporal, geographical and environmental frameworks of the early hominin emergence and evolution in South Africa during the Plio-Pleistocene are key elements for the understanding of the human lineage history. The cercopithecoids, relatively abundant in the African Neogene fossiliferous deposits and almost invariably associated with hominin remains, represent sensitive biochronological markers and ecological indicators. However, based on traditional morphological criteria only, the systematics of the cercopithecoid fossil record remains uncertain. In order to better characterize their paleobiodiversity, by means of high-resolution imaging techniques we have detailed 91 South African cercopithecoid craniodental specimens from the sites of Makapansgat, Taung, Sterkfontein, Kromdraai and Swartkrans. More specifically, we measured and compared the variation in dental endostructural organization, bony labyrinth conformation and endocranial architecture through the application of statistical and virtual modeling methods (e.g., geometric morphometrics, deformation-based models). For comparative purposes, we also integrated in our analyses a sample consisting of 80 extant cercopithecoid specimens. Besides the identification of some new characters suitable for the diagnosis of fossil taxa, our results reveal biomarkers useful for the reconstruction of paleoenvironmental and biochronological contexts, notably based on the enamel-dentine junction morphology and the neocortical architecture. The paleobiodiversity assessment highlights a certain degree of morphological homogeneity for some of the papionin taxa and suggests a reduction of the number of species actually present in the South African fossiliferous deposits.

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