-
considered to be the most
basal haplorhines, are
believed to be more
closely related to the
tarsiers than to
other haplorhines. The
exact relationship is not...
- are
sister group to the
tarsiers (Tarsiiformes),
together forming the
haplorhines. The
radiation occurred about 60
million years ago (during the Cenozoic...
-
Cladogram of
modern primate groups; all
tarsiers are
haplorhines, but not all
haplorhines are tarsiers; all apes are catarrhines, but not all catarrhines...
-
features in
their tarsus (ankle bones) that
differentiate them from
haplorhines, such as a
sloping talo-fibular
facet (the face
where the
talus bone...
-
omomyids lack the
numerous skeletal specializations of
living haplorhines.
These haplorhine adaptations -
absent in
omomyids - include:
significant reduction...
-
confers the need for it in the diet
would tend to
place tarsiers with
haplorhines. At a
lower phylogenetic level, the
tarsiers have,
until recently, all...
- strepsirrhines,
which include the lemurs, galagos, and lorisids, and the
haplorhines,
which include the
tarsiers and the
simians (monkeys and apes). Primates...
- (monkeys and apes), it was a
haplorhine primate, and it also may have
resembled the last
common ancestor of all
haplorhines as well as the last
common ancestor...
- JJ,
Beard KC (June 2013). "The
oldest known primate skeleton and
early haplorhine evolution". Nature. 498 (7452): 60–64. Bibcode:2013Natur.498...60N. doi:10...
-
separation was
achieved by the
evolution of a
postorbital bar, with
haplorhines (dry-nosed primates)
later evolving a
postorbital septum. Physiological...