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Mastering Primate Taxonomy

Like Duolingo, but for Mastering Primate Taxonomy. Tomo turns the whole topic into a game you play five minutes a day, until it actually sticks.

For the part of you with thirty open tabs that never became anything.

190 bite-size levelsAbout 5 minutes each

Free during early access · No credit card · iPhone & Android

Prosimian Pip
Mastering Primate Taxonomy
with Prosimian Pip
190
Levels
9
Sections
5
Min/day
What you'll learn

Key ideas in Mastering Primate Taxonomy

  • Platyrrhines (New World monkeys) typically have three premolars
  • Strepsirrhines have a bar but lack a back wall to the orbit
  • Catarrhines (Old World monkeys and apes) have two premolars
  • Distinguishing between New World and Old World monkeys using dental formulas
  • Haplorhines have full postorbital closure for eye stability
  • Connecting eye socket morphology to taxonomic groups
  • The petrosal bone forms the skeletal floor of the middle ear in primates
  • Anterior (central) foramen magnum indicates upright, vertical posture
  • This is the single most reliable diagnostic trait for the order Primates
  • Posterior (rear) foramen magnum indicates quadrupedal or horizontal posture
  • Deep mandibles and high ascending rami provide leverage for heavy chewing
  • Broad molars with sharp shearing crests help break down cellulose
  • The hypocone creates a square molar surface for grinding
  • Transitioning from three to four cusps marks a shift toward herbivory
  • Longer snouts correlate with larger olfactory bulbs and less orbital convergence
  • Prosimians generally have longer snouts than anthropoids
Why not just Google it

You've tried the other tabs

Wikipedia

Thirty open tabs. Four facts you actually kept.

YouTube

You watched. You nodded. By Sunday it was gone.

ChatGPT

One answer, then back to scrolling.

Online courses

Eight weeks. You meant to finish. You didn't.

Tomo gives Mastering Primate Taxonomy the Duolingo treatment: levels, streaks, and quick quizzes that test what you just learned. That game loop is what the tabs above never had, so it's the one you actually finish.

Try a question

Here's what playing it feels like

A real question from this course. Take your best guess.

Teeth and Eye Sockets

If you can poke a finger through a skull's eye socket and touch the jaw muscles behind it, what is likely true?

Get it right to open this lesson and 189 more in the app.

Course map

Where Mastering Primate Taxonomy takes you

Go beyond basic identification to master the complex evolutionary lineages and morphological nuances of the order Primates. From field identification to molecular phylogenetics, become an expert in the diversity of our closest relatives.

  1. 1

    Field Identification and Morphological Markers

    • Cranial and Dental Synapomorphies
    • Postcranial Adaptations for Locomotion
    • Differentiating Strepsirrhine vs. Haplorhine Traits
    • Pelage Patterns and Sexual Dimorphism
    • Vocalizations as Taxonomic Indicators
  2. 2

    The Strepsirrhine Radiation

    • Lemuriformes: Madagascar's Isolated Lineages
    • Lorisidae and Galagidae: Nocturnal Specialists
    • The Toothcomb and Grooming Claw Mechanics
  3. 3

    Tarsiers and the Haplorhine Transition

    • Tarsiiformes: The Evolutionary Mosaic
    • Phylogenetic Debates: Omomyoid Ancestry
    • Sensory Specializations and Orbit Anatomy
    • Dietary Niche Partitioning in Tarsiers
  4. 4

    Platyrrhini: New World Diversification

    • Cebidae, Atelidae, and Pitheciidae
    • Prehensile Tail Evolution and Biomechanics
    • The Three-Premolar Dental Formula
    • Island Biogeography and Neotropical Origins
    • Callitrichine Chimerism and Social Structure
    • Aotus: The Only Nocturnal Anthropoid
  5. 5

    Catarrhini: Old World Monkeys and Apes

    • Cercopithecoidea: Cheek Pouches vs. Complex Stomachs
    • The Ischial Callosities and Tail Reduction
    • Macaca: The Most Widespread Non-Human Genus
  6. 6

    Hominoidea: The Great and Lesser Apes

    • Hylobatidae: The Brachiation Masters
    • Hominidae: Pongo, Gorilla, and Pan
    • Suspensory Posture and Torso Reorganization
    • Cognitive Complexity and Tool Use Taxonomy
    • The Genetic Proximity of Pan and Homo
  7. 7

    Molecular Phylogenetics and Systematics

    • Mitochondrial DNA vs. Nuclear Genome Mapping
    • The Molecular Clock and Divergence Dating
    • Cladistics and the Hennigian Principle
    • Introgression and Hybrid Zones in Primates
  8. 8

    Paleoprimatology and Fossil Records

    • Plesiadapiforms: The Stem Primates
    • Eocene Adapoids and the Strepsirrhine Split
    • The Fayum Depression and Anthropoid Origins
    • Miocene Ape Diversity and Extinction Events
    • Gigantopithecus: The Limits of Primate Size
  9. 9

    Conservation Taxonomy and Ethics

    • The Taxonomic Inflation Debate
    • IUCN Red List Criteria for Primates
    • Cryptic Species Discovery in the 21st Century

9 sections · 38 units · 190 levels. Built to play, not to enroll.

How it's taught

You pick the voice

This course
The Bestie

Mastering Primate Taxonomy is taught in the The Bestie style: your friend who just gets it. Want a different feel? In the app you can spin up the same topic in any of Tomo's teaching styles. Same facts, totally different vibe.

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