Site icon Norbert Haupt

The Unbroken Line of My Ancestry

I am here today because of an unbroken line of ancestors that reaches from the earliest mammals all the way to me today. More specifically, and astonishingly, I am alive today because:

This line of thinking caused me to think back to the earliest primate we know about, the purgatorius that lived about 65 million years ago.

The purgatorius is believed to be the earliest example of a primate or a proto-primate. It was a small rat-like mammal, about five to fifteen inches long and lived in borrows underground about 65 million years ago. When the dinosaurs became rapidly extinct around that time, a niche opened up for mammals. Some scientists speculate that the purgatorius, due to its primate-like teeth, may be the most distant ancestor of all primates. Over time more advanced primates evolved from the purgatorius: monkeys, apes, and eventually, 63 million years later, some hominids started walking upright in East Africa.

So there was a rat-like primate that looked like a rodent, which burrowed in mountains of dinosaur dung for beetles and worms 65 million years ago that had a litter of babies, at least one of which survived to have its own litter, and so on, and some twenty million generations later here I am…

…typing this up.

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