“…Plesiadapiforms, a geographically widespread radiation of Paleogene mammals , are the only group of fossils widely regarded as probable stem primates (Simpson, 1935;Gingerich, 1976;Szalay and Delson, 1979;Szalay et al, 1987;Bloch and Boyer, 2002;Janecka et al, 2007). Though various researchers remain skeptical about plesiadapiforms as stem primates [see Godinot (2007)] and some well-sampled cladistic analyses contradict this idea (e.g., Ni et al, 2013), plesiadapiforms are universally regarded as members of Euarchonta, a group whose extant members include primates, dermopterans (Cynocephalus and Galeopterus, the "flying lemurs"), and scandentians (Tupaiidae and Ptilocercidae, the treeshrews) (Szalay and Decker, 1974;Szalay and Delson, 1979;Szalay and Dagosto, 1980;Szalay and Drawhorn, 1980;Szalay et al, 1987;Bloch and Boyer, 2002;Cartmill, 2012). At the very least, plesiadapiforms are the only euarchontans with a sampled postcranial fossil record just prior to the appearance of taxa usually assumed to be members of euprimates.…”