Generation times in wild chimpanzees and gorillas suggest earlier divergence times in great ape and human evolution
Boston University · Public Risk Management Association · +10 more institutions
Abstract
Fossils and molecular data are two independent sources of information that should in principle provide consistent inferences of when evolutionary lineages diverged. Here we use an alternative approach to genetic inference of species split times in recent human and ape evolution that is independent of the fossil record. We first use genetic parentage information on a large number of wild chimpanzees and mountain gorillas to directly infer their average generation times. We then compare these generation time estimates with those of humans and apply recent estimates of the human mutation rate per generation to derive estimates of split times of great apes and humans that are independent of fossil calibration. We…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.57
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 66
Authors
20- KEKevin E. LangergraberCorresponding
Boston University, Public Risk Management Association
- KPKay Prüfer
Max Planck Society, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
- CRCarolyn Rowney
Public Risk Management Association
- CBChristophe Boesch
Public Risk Management Association
- CCCatherine Crockford
University of St Andrews
Topics & keywords
- Human evolution
- Divergence (linguistics)
- Evolutionary biology
- Gorilla
- Hominidae
- Biology
- Biological evolution
- Paleontology