History of discovery
''Epipliopithecus'' was discovered and described by Helmuth Zapfe and Johannes Hürzeler. The fossil material was found in a fissure deposit near Devínska Nová Ves (Slovakia) in the southern part of the Carpathian Mountains. The rock surrounding the fissure is limestone and dolomite of Jurassic age. The fissure deposit itself is clearly much younger, as has been demonstrated to date to the lower middle Miocene (Helvetian), approximately 15.5 million years old. Zapfe and Hürzeler originally gave the specimens the name ''Pliopithecus'' (''Epipliopithecus'') ''vindobonensis''. ''Epipliopithecus'' denoted a sub-generic distinction which implied that this species was ancestral to later pliopithecoids like ''Pliopithecus antiquus'' and ''Pliopithecus platyodon''. With the subsequent discovery of many more pliopithecoid species across Eurasia, the precise phylogeny of these species has become less certain. Given the unique morphology of ''Epipliopithecus'', however, researchers have elevated ''Epliopithecus'' from a sub-genus to a genus.Anatomy and phylogeny
''Epipliopithecus'' has a number of morphological characters that demonstrate its primitive phylogenetic position relative to living catarrhines. One of these most notable characters is found in the outer ear morphology of ''Epipliopithecus''. New World monkeys and basal anthropoids (i.e. ''Aegyptopithecus'', ''Parapithecus'', and ''Apidium'') have a bony ectoympanic ring, whereas crown catarrhines (Old World monkeys and apes) have a completely ossified ectotympanic tube. ''Epipliopithecus'' possesses an intermediate morphology in the form of a partially ossified ectotympanic tube. Some authors have argued this morphology is best interpreted as an intermediate evolutionary step between an ectoympanic ring and ectotympanic tube. Others have suggested it may be an intermediate developmental morphology, as a similar condition is seen in some extant juvenile catarrhines. The snout of ''Epipliopithecus'' is reduced in length compared to earlier catarrhines like ''Aegyptopithecus''. The crania is globular shape, somewhat similar to a gibbon. These traits, combined with seemingly similar dental characteristics, led some early researchers to suggest a close evolutionary relationship between Pliopithecoidea and '' Hylobates''. This hypothesis has largely fallen out of favor, mostly because of the primitive nature of the skeleton of ''Epipliopithecus''. ''Epipliopithecus'' had a tail, and although this trait is shared by some crown catarrhines (Old World Monkeys), it excludes pliopithecoids fromReferences
{{Taxonbar, from2=Q20027601, from1=Q20064473 Pliopithecidae Monotypic prehistoric primate genera