
02-10-2010, 07:48 AM
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Jerome Park
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: Ft Lauderdale
Posts: 9,413
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kasept
I've seen a fair amount of equine/veterinary comparative research on this topic, and indeed, human physiology does continue to improve, (with nutrition, training methods and associated tech innovations contributing), while the equine does not... no matter what end on the brilliant to solid spectrum horses are bred. Conclusions have been drawn that they appear physically capable of only reaching a certain top end speed, and no amount of improved nutrition or training appears capable of improving that. Lowering of records in harness racing for instance, has been attributed mostly to innovations and improvement of the buggy like polymer or aluminum frames, etc. I'll try to find the studies, but they're on my home computer and I'm in Florida. This is a fascinating discussion and I can bring it up on ATR with the vet guests.
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does it have anything to do with the fact that humans (unless your frow WV) dont inbreed and races horses are almost all inbred?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
Can I start just making stuff up out of thin air, too? 
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