The evolution of man: a popular exposition of the principal points of human ontogeny and phylogenyFrom the German of Ernst Haeckel . d-rats. Others{Macrotarsi) are very near akin to the Insect-eaters, andyet others (Cheiromys) to the Gnawers {Rodentia). Onegenus {Galeopithecus) forms a direct transition to the , some of the Semi-apes {Bvachytarsi) approach verynear to true Apes. Among the latter are some tail-less forms{, the Lori, Stenoj^s, Fig. 199). From these highly in-teresting and important relations of the Semi-apes to thevarious Discoplacental orders, we may fairly infe
The evolution of man: a popular exposition of the principal points of human ontogeny and phylogenyFrom the German of Ernst Haeckel . d-rats. Others{Macrotarsi) are very near akin to the Insect-eaters, andyet others (Cheiromys) to the Gnawers {Rodentia). Onegenus {Galeopithecus) forms a direct transition to the , some of the Semi-apes {Bvachytarsi) approach verynear to true Apes. Among the latter are some tail-less forms{, the Lori, Stenoj^s, Fig. 199). From these highly in-teresting and important relations of the Semi-apes to thevarious Discoplacental orders, we may fairly infer thatof the extant representatives of this group, they are thenearest to the common primitive parent-form. Among thedirect common ancestors of Apes and Men, there must havebeen some Deciduata which we should class amoncr theSemi-apes, were we to see them alive. We may thereforeconsider this order as a special stage, following the PouchedAnimals, as the eighteenth stage in the human pedigree. 164 THE EVOLUTION OF MAN. Probably our ancestors among the Semi-apes closely re-sembled the extant Brachytarsi or Lemurs {Lemur, Lichan-. FiG. 199.—The Slender Lori of Ceylon (Stenops gracilis). otus, Stenops), and, like these, led a quiet life, climbing ontrees. The extant Semi-apes are mostly nocturnal animalsof gentle and melancholy disposition, subsisting on fruits. APES. 165 The Semi-apes are immediately followed by the trueA-pes (Swiice), as the nineteenth stage in the human pedi-gree. It has long been beyond doubt that of all animalsthe Apes are in all respects the most nearly allied to as, on the one side, the lowest Apes approach very nearto the Semi-apes, so, on the other side, do the highest Apesmost closely resemble Man. By carefully studying the Com-parative Anatomy of Apes and Man, it is possible to trace agradual, uninterrupted advance in the Ape-organization up tothe purely human structure; and on impartially testing this Ape-question, which has lately been agita
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