Quote:
Originally Posted by Danzig
also, check out 'ashfall' in nebraska, a fantastic fossil site. we were taught in school that the first horses came to north america with the european explorers..
not quite.
among the remains at the fossil site are both one and three toed horses!
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That's one of the things I find so interesting about large mammals in North America- horses were here, then died out, then were reintroduced by the Spanish.
It ties into an argument I have will well-meaning animal rights people who opposed carriage horses- despite what they think, we don't have "wild" horses here; the Mustangs are better described as "feral" because 500 years of being loose on a range doesn't counteract 6000 years of domestication. The only truly wild species of horse is Przewalski's. This link is to a fact sheet on them; the first part is about their taxonomy and that, while they are closely related to the domestic horse, the domestic horse is not descended from them:
http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/41763/0
I'm glad evolution was brought up in this thread. I love this sh*t. Biodiversity is incredibly fascinating.