-
consider Dermoptera to be a
suborder of
Primates and use the
suborder Euprimates for the "true" primates. The
primate lineage is
thought to go back at...
-
thought to be more
closely related to primates. The
first true
primates (
euprimates) do not
appear in the
fossil record until the
early Eocene (~55 mya),...
-
having no
surviving descendants). The
crown primates are also
called "
Euprimates" in this context. Alternatively, in 2018, the
Plesiadapiformes were proposed...
- Bloch,
Jonathan I. (2018-09-01). "Oldest
evidence for
grooming claws in
euprimates".
Journal of
Human Evolution. 122: 1–22. Bibcode:2018JHumE.122....1B....
- Sergi; Silcox, Mary T.; Holroyd,
Patricia A. (2018-09-22). "New
omomyoids (
Euprimates, Mammalia) from the late
Uintan of
southern California, USA, and the question...
-
Euprimateformes are
group of
plesiadapiformes that
includes euprimates and plesiadapoids,
proposed by
Bloch et al. in 2007.
Hypothesis of evolutionary...
-
plesiadapiform found in Europe.
Other classifications ****ume they are stem
euprimates, eosimiid-like simians, or an
early tarsiiform. Many
authorities consider...
-
including the Perissodactyla, Artiodactyla, and
Primates (or the
suborder Euprimates)
appeared already by the
Early Eocene,
diversifying rapidly and developing...
-
plesiadapiforms are
included within the
order Primates, in
which case
Euprimates is
sometimes treated as a suborder, with
Strepsirrhini becoming an infraorder...
- †Plagiomenidae
Family †Mixodectidae
Family Galeopithecidae:
colugos Suborder Euprimates Infraorder Strepsirrhini Family †Plesiopithecidae
Superfamily Daubentonioidea...