The WEIRD Way Monkeys Got to America

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Every single monkey in South America is a  descendant of African monkeys. We know that   because we’ve looked at their DNA. But – and  this is going to sound pretty obvious – South   America and Africa are not close to each other  – and even back in the day when those monkeys   first arrived in South America, those continents  were still very far apart. So how did monkeys get   from Africa to South America? Strangely,  most scientists think they took a raft.  Hi, I’m David, and this is MinuteEarth. When I say  the monkeys took a raft, I don’t mean that they   actually built some sort of sea-faring vessel.  I mean they rode on a collection of driftwood,   debris and vines, or on a piece of a boggy  marsh that broke off the mainland and floated   away. But even still, the rafting hypothesis  is, on its face, ridiculous. Think of all the   things that need to go right for a monkey  rafting trip to actually happen. First,   a mat of vegetation – one that for some reason  had a bunch of monkeys on it – would have had   to break off and float out to sea perhaps as a  result of a once-in-a-millennium storm. Second,   that mat would have had to stay afloat for weeks  on the waves without breaking apart. Third,   the monkeys would need to have enough food and  water on that raft to survive the journey. Fourth,   the mat would have had to land in a place  that monkeys could actually live. And fifth,   enough monkeys of the right age and sex would  have to have survived in order to successfully   make new monkeys. The probability of any of these  things actually happening are incredibly small,   and the probability of all of them  happening are astronomically tiny.  But there just aren’t any other  potential explanations that could work.  We know from studying plate tectonics that even  30 million years ago, when monkeys likely arrived,   there were no land bridges connecting the  continents of Africa and South America,   so the monkeys did not simply walk into South  America. We know from studying fossils that those   ancestral primates were not great swimmers, so  they couldn’t have monkey-paddled over there. If   they didn’t walk and they didn’t swim, and they  didn’t fly – because this isn’t the Wizard of   Oz – then the only remaining way for them to get  there would be to float. And we've learned a few   things that make a successful ancient rafting trip  slightly more likely than it first appears. First,   back then, the powerful east to west equatorial  currents were even stronger than they are now. So   once a raft was adrift from Africa, it would head  basically straight West – and perhaps arrive in   South America within just a few weeks, which means  the monkeys wouldn’t need to be as lucky with   their route. Secondly, we know that back then –  just like now – there were times of the year when   the Atlantic had very few waves, which means the  monkeys wouldn’t need to be as lucky with their   raft’s survival. And third, we know that back  then, it rained basically every day along tropical   latitudes, which means the monkeys wouldn’t need  to be as lucky with their food and water supplies.  But perhaps most importantly, given enough  attempts, extremely unlikely events can   happen. Let’s say that a storm strong enough  to send a monkey-laden mat of vegetation into   the sea only happens once every two thousand  years. Even still, over a few million years,   there would be thousands of chances for  voyages to start, and only one of them   would actually need to succeed in order for old  world monkeys to become, well, new world monkeys.  In fact, scientists are pretty sure that this  kind of rafting also brought the ancestors of   lemurs 400 miles from mainland Africa  to Madagascar. And brought reptiles and   rats about 600 miles from the South American  coast to the Galapagos islands. And in 1995,   scientists actually documented  the voyage of a natural raft;   this one brought 15 green iguanas more than  100 miles across the Caribbean to the island of   Anguilla for the first time. It turns out that the  world is big enough and time is long enough that   things that we think are so improbable as to be  impossible have actually happened many times ove You can now send us Super Thanks! If  you liked this video – or any of our   other science explainers – you can directly  support us by clicking on the button below.   It’s like a tip jar – a one-time payment  of a dollar or two that says “keep up the   good work” or “get your next cup of coffee on  me”. A few bucks might not sound like much,   but every dollar helps us spend more of  our time making videos about the amazing   science that fascinates us all and less  of our time figuring out how the heck to   sell Battle Royale Mobile Minigames or Mega  Massage Chairs or whatever. We just want to   nerd out and make videos for you, so give it a  click and let us know what you think. Thanks!
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Channel: MinuteEarth
Views: 983,654
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: MinuteEarth, Minute Earth, MinutePhysics, Minute Physics, earth, history, science, environment, environmental science, earth science, Old world monkeys, new world monkeys, rafting hypothesis, evolution, oceanic dispersal, equatorial current.
Id: W6LnB4kVJ84
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 4min 1sec (241 seconds)
Published: Thu Aug 10 2023
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