Basic introduction of Chinese names: Latin name of anthropoid suborder: anthropoid suborder, alias: rhinoceros suborder: animal kingdom: Chordata suborder: Vertebrate suborder: Mammalian suborder: Outla suborder: Primate suborder: anthropoid suborder Brief introduction, summary, introduction The anthropoid suborder includes platypus suborder distributed in the New World, Katarina suborder distributed in the Old World and some others. To sum up, Eosimias (pictured below) is the earliest member of the suborder Apes, a very small primate that lived in China in the middle Eocene and weighed only about100g. The characteristics of Shu apes are very primitive, and it is still controversial whether they belong to the most primitive higher primates or tarsiers. Similar to Australopithecus, African tarsal monkey Afrotarsius lived in Egypt in the early Oligocene, and African tarsal monkey is also a controversial species. In the late Eocene, some primates, such as apes, lived in Southeast Asia. These primates are huge and weigh 7 kilograms. There is no consensus on whether they belong to higher primates or are closer to mouse monkeys or rabbit monkeys. Egypt in Africa is the richest place for early higher primates. In the late Eocene and early Oligocene, besides African tarsal monkeys, many other primate species must be members of higher primates. These higher primates can be divided into two categories. One is the Parazoan, which has the characteristics of both the broad-nosed suborder and the narrow-nosed suborder. As to which group is more primitive, there is still controversy. The other is protozoa, a primitive order with narrow alar. Because they have the characteristics of both monkeys and apes, they were once considered as a transitional type between them, but now they are considered as their common ancestors.