• Title of article

    Early Pliocene Tragulidae and peafowls in the Rift Valley, Kenya: evidence for rainforest in East Africa

  • Author/Authors

    Pickford، نويسنده , , Martin and Senut، نويسنده , , Brigitte and Mourer-Chauviré، نويسنده , , Cécile، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    179
  • To page
    189
  • Abstract
    The Early Pliocene Mabaget Formation (5.3–4.5 Ma), Tugen Hills, Kenya, has yielded remains of the African tragulid Hyemoschus aquaticus, which is today confined to rainforests of West Africa and the Congo Basin as far east as western Uganda. The same unit has also yielded a peafowl, Pavo sp. The Mabaget Formation has yielded early hominid fossils variously attributed to Australopithecus praegens or Ardipithecus ramidus. This sedimentary deposit joins the list of very early hominid units that preserve evidence of forest in the vicinity of the basin at the time of deposition. This discovery adds weight to the suggestion that the earliest hominids inhabited well wooded to forested regions rather than open country. It now seems more likely that bipedalism evolved in wooded to forested ecosystems and was, for several million years, linked to arborealism and that only after it was perfected did hominids spread into more open environments as fully functional bipeds. If so, then there is no reason to postulate a quadrupedal ‘knuckle-walking’ stage in the evolution of hominids. To cite this article: M. Pickford et al., C. R. Palevol (2004).
  • Keywords
    Kenya , Tropical forest , Palaeoenvironment , early Pliocene , Kenya , Paléoenvironnement , Tragulidae , Tragulidae , Peafowls , Paons , Forêt tropicale , Pliocène basal
  • Journal title
    Comptes Rendus Palevol
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    Comptes Rendus Palevol
  • Record number

    2281729