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Life

Skull tells tale of the lost primates of the Caribbean

By Colin Barras

21 July 2010

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Capuchin cousins

(Image: Michael And Patricia Fogden/Minden FLPA)

Skull tells tale of the lost primates of the Caribbean
Skull tells tale of the lost primates of the Caribbean

PITY the mammals living on lush Caribbean islands. Over the last 12,000 years, they have suffered the highest extinction rates of any on Earth. Now, a primate skull found in an underwater cave on Hispaniola underscores what we have lost – a fauna so primitive and strange that the archipelago has been likened to Madagascar.

Today, there are no primates in the Caribbean, and it wasn’t until 1952 that palaeontologists accepted that the islands had once been home to monkeys.

The new find – the first well-preserved skull from Hispaniola (see picture)…

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