Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThe goals of this study were to describe and interpret two new fossil assemblages of cercopithecin monkeys (n = 328), one from the Faro Daba beds (ca. 100,000 years) and the other one from the Chai Baro beds (>158,000 years old), in the Afar Rift of Ethiopia.Materials and MethodsWe describe the two assemblages and compare them to extant cercopithecin species and the smaller fossil assemblage from Asbole, Ethiopia (ca. 600 ka). We use a population‐based approach to the taxonomy given the unusually large number of specimens. Craniodental and postcranial anatomy are presented. Evidence of locomotor habitus is described and evaluated in a framework of hybridization and postcranial plasticity.ResultsWe attribute all cercopithecin specimens from both beds to cf. Chlorocebus and conclude that the Faro Daba and Chai Baro assemblages likely sample single species at each time horizon. Subtle differences between the two assemblages, mostly in postcranial morphology, are insufficient to justify separation at the species level.DiscussionThe large sample sizes and unique preservational aspects of these two assemblages open a new window into the recent evolution of guenons. Our data indicate that these fossil populations may be ancestral to the cercopithecins currently living in the Afar region of Ethiopia.

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