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The Duke Lemur Center is home to the largest population of living lemurs outside of Madagascar. Did you know it is also home to over 35,000 fossil specimens, including the largest fossil primate collection in North America?

Researchers from around the world study Duke Lemur Center fossils, learning more about the ancient environments that shaped lemurs and their distant primate cousins: humans! By studying the extinction of primates in the past, we are working to prevent primate extinctions in the present. We are also delving into the biology of ancient primates to learn when and where key primate traits – like big brains, social complexity, and grasping hands – first appeared.

Unfortunately, some of our most important fossils are extremely delicate. They were fossilized with salt and sulfur, which can cause the fossils to crumble unexpectedly, especially when temperature and humidity fluctuate…and we have a lot of temperature and humidity fluctuation in Durham, NC.

(Click here to watch a video of paleontologist Dr. Matt Borths, curator of the DLC’s fossil collection, explaining why fossils deteriorate — and how YOU can help!)

We have a space in the fossil lab that we try to keep at a constant temperature and humidity to stabilize the fossils when they begin to deteriorate. Duke facilities has worked with us to design an updated fossil room, which includes a special HVAC attachment that will keep the room stable. The attachment and installation total $9,200. We’ve already raised $1,500 (thank you, donors!), but we still have $7,700 to go.

From  now through 12/31/2019, all donations made via this link and/or the “DONATE” buttons at the top and bottom of this page will go towards this stabilization room — a kind of “fossil ICU” that will protect these delicate fossils for decades to come while we work with paleontologists and geochemists to find the best way to preserve this unique and irreplaceable collection. All donations are tax deductible.

The fossil lab staff includes researchers dedicated to preserving the fossils. We are collecting 3D x-rays called microCT scans that can be used to make 3D digital models of the fossils. Researchers and students can study these digital models without handling the delicate specimens. The digital museum is available to anyone with an internet connection at the Duke Library-supported website MorphoSource.

The DLC fossil collection helps researchers understand extinction in the past so we can prevent extinction in the present. There are still new species waiting to be described in the fossil collection. There are so many reasons preserve them for future researchers, students, and visitors!

Thank you so much for your support! If you have any questions, please contact our development officer, Mary Paisley, at (919) 401-7252 or mary.paisley@duke.edu. She would love to hear from you!


Learn More

65 million years ago, soon after the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs, the primate story was unfolding in North America. From the northern hemisphere, primates found their way to Africa, Madagascar, and South America. Sorting out how they adapted and diversified their way around the globe drives much of the research at the Division of Fossil Primates (DFP) at the Duke Lemur Center, which has field sites around the world (marked above with a red dot). Click anywhere on the image for a larger view.

The Duke Lemur Center houses more than 35,000 fossils, including one of the world’s most important collections of early anthropoid primates. These fossils help us understand our evolutionary journey as primates. Primates are the group of mammals that includes lemurs, monkeys, apes, and humans. For more than forty years, Duke scientists have conducted fieldwork around the world, targeting major branches in the primate family tree for deeper exploration. Our collection includes 55 million year-old, lemur-like primate fossils from Wyoming; 37 to 28 million year-old anthropoid fossils from Egypt; 19 to 7 million year-old ape fossils from Egypt and India; 13 million year-old New World monkeys from Colombia; and 10,000 to 500 year-old lemur fossils from Madagascar.

Because Duke paleontologists are also interested in role the ecosystem played in shaping our primate relatives, many of the 35,000+ specimens at the DLC’s fossil division also represent non-primate lineages, including bats, proboscideans (the relatives of elephants), crocodilians, birds, rodents, carnivorans, sharks, and anthracotheres.

Read more about our fossils on the Division of Fossil Primates homepage.