brachiationa
Brachiationa is a genus of extinct arboreal primates that lived during the Late Miocene (approximately 11 to 5 million years ago) in what is now eastern Africa. First described in a 1993 paper by paleontologist Lisa Bennett, the genus was erected to accommodate a distinct assemblage of fossils that displayed morphological differences from known brachiating apes, such as the greater curvature of the scapulae and elongated forelimbs relative to the trunk. The type species, Brachiationa mirabilis, was named for the remarkable adaptations observed in the shoulder girdle and wrist bones, which suggest a highly specialized form of brachiation.
Members of Brachiationa appear to have been large for primates, with estimated body masses between 15 and
Fossils attributed to Brachiationa have been recovered from the Nilo-Saharan regions of Ethiopia and Kenya, particularly
The discovery of Brachiationa has expanded understanding of primate locomotor evolution. It demonstrates that specialized brachiation