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Nakalipithecus was first described from a right jawbone, the
holotype KNM-NA46400, and eleven isolated teeth excavated in 2005 by a team of Japanese and Kenyan researchers in
mud flow deposits in the Nakali area of northern Kenya's former
Rift Valley Province, hence the genus name
Nakalipithecus ("Nakali ape"). The species name is in honour of the late Japanese geologist Katsuhiro Nakayama who worked on the expedition. The specimen dates to about 9.9–9.8 million years ago in the
Late Miocene. The specimens are housed by the
National Museums of Kenya. The holotype preserves all 3 lower
molars, and the isolated teeth are: a left first
incisor, a right first incisor, a right
canine, a right third upper
premolar, a left third upper premolar, a right left fourth upper premolar, a left fourth upper premolar, a right first upper molar, a right third upper molar, a left third upper molar, and a left fourth lower premolar. It is debated if great
apes evolved in Africa or Eurasia given the abundance of early fossil apes species in the latter and the paucity in the former, despite all modern great apes except the
orangutan being known from Africa. The first Miocene African ape,
Samburupithecus, was discovered in 1982. It is unclear how
Nakalipithecus is related to other apes. It is possible these Late Miocene African apes were
stem great apes closely related to the
last common ancestor of all modern African apes, which existed about 9–8 million years ago.
Nakalipithecus has also been proposed to have been the ancestor to the 8 million year old
Chororapithecus, which possibly represents an early member of the
gorilla line; if both of these are correct, then
Nakalipithecus could potentially represent an early gorilla. ==Anatomy==