52-Million-Year-Old Ankle Fossil Suggests Our Ancestors Were High Flying Acrobats
언어
읽기 수준
기사 듣기
Biologists have long believed the common ancestor of all primates was a small, deliberate animal which used its grasping hands and feet to scamper along thin branches foraging for fruits and insects. They theorized that the leaping skills came later, after the proto-primate evolved into two distinct groups — wet-nosed primates like lemurs and dry-nosed primates that include monkeys, apes, and humans. However, the discovery of a perfectly preserved 52-million-year-old fossil seems to suggest that the first primate might have been leading an impressively acrobatic lifestyle, leaping from one tree to another.
이 기사의 나머지 부분을 읽고 학습 도구에 액세스하려면 등록해야합니다.
지금 학습 시작하기댓글 201개
- Kaylee약 8년52 years old woo
- RebeccaCat11 약 8년Hahahahha
- :)약 8년I never knew:D
- S약 8년Intresting
- S약 8년That's awesome
- Norbert 약 8년I wish I could jump from tree to tree
- jeff약 8년omg this is awesome
- Nolan 약 8년The facts are good
- Babe ringshaw약 8년I’m a acrobat I didn’t know that my ancestors were too
- unknown약 8년i know right