-like build The first
Dryopithecus fossils were
described from the French
Pyrenees by French paleontologist
Édouard Lartet in 1856, In 1965, English palaeoanthropologist
David Pilbeam and American palaeontologist
Elwyn L. Simons separated the genus–which included specimens from across the
Old World at the time–into three
subgenera:
Dryopithecus in Europe,
Sivapithecus in Asia, and
Proconsul in Africa. Afterwards, there was discussion over whether each of these subgenera should be elevated to genus. In 1979,
Sivapithecus was elevated to genus, and
Dryopithecus was subdivided again into the subgenera
Dryopithecus in Europe, and
Proconsul,
Limnopithecus, and
Rangwapithecus in Africa. Since that time, several more species were assigned and moved, and by the 21st century, the genus included
D. fontani,
D. brancoi,
D. laietanus, and
D. crusafonti. However, the 2009 discovery of a partial skull of
D. fontani caused many of them to be split off into different genera, such as the newly erected
Hispanopithecus, because part of the confusion was caused by the fragmentary nature of the
Dryopithecus holotype with vague and incomplete diagnostic characteristics. Based on dental development in
chimpanzees, it was 6 to 8 years old, and several diagnostic characteristics made from the holotype would be lost in mature
D. fontani; A partial left
humerus arm bone, an additional mandible (MNHNP 1872-2), a left lower jaw and five isolated teeth are also known from the site. • A male partial face, IPS35026, and femur, IPS41724, from Vallès Penedès in
Catalonia, Spain.
Dryopithecus is classified into the namesake great ape
tribe Dryopithecini, along with
Hispanopithecus,
Rudapithecus,
Ouranopithecus,
Anoiapithecus, and
Pierolapithecus, though the latter two may belong to
Dryopithecus, Dryopithecini is either regarded as an offshoot of
orangutans (
Ponginae), an ancestor to African apes and humans (
Homininae), or its own separate branch (
Dryopithecinae).
Dryopithecus was a part of an
adaptive radiation of
great apes in the expanding forests of Europe in the warm climates of the Miocene Climatic Optimum, possibly descending from
early or
middle Miocene African apes which diversified in the proceeding
Middle Miocene disruption (a cooling event). It is possible great apes first evolved in Europe or Asia, and then migrated down into Africa. ==Description==