Horse racing 25 000 years ago
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Horse racing 25 000 years ago
13 years 7 months ago
Ancient horses' spotted history reflected in cave artX(
By Jennifer Carpenter Science reporter, BBC News
Scientists have found evidence that leopard-spotted horses roamed Europe 25,000 years ago alongside humans.
Until now, studies had only recovered the DNA of black and brown coloured coats from fossil specimens.
New genetic evidence suggests "dappled" horses depicted in European cave art were inspired by real life, and are less symbolic than previously thought.
The findings are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Horses, which were the most abundant large mammal roaming Eurasian 25,000 years ago, were a key component of early European diets.
So it is not surprising that the cave art of this time had a certain equestrian flare - horses make up 30% of the animals depicted in European cave paintings from this era.
Przewalski horse and domestic horses (Credit: PNAS) The Przewalski (far left) is the last remaining wild horse and a close relative of the domestic horse (three examples to the right)
Biologists, interested in the diversity of European animals before the last Ice Age, are interested in how accurately these early artistic impressions portrayed the colouring of the horses that lived alongside the ancient humans.
"It was critical to ensure that the horse depictions from the cave paintings were based on real-life experiences rather than products of the imagination," explained lead author Arne Ludwig from The Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin.
In previous work, Dr Ludwig, and his colleagues, recovered only the DNA of black and brown coat colours from the prehistoric horse bones.
But the dappled coats of the 25,000 year horses depicted at the Pech Merle cave complex in France convinced the team to take a second look.
Fur coats
By revisiting the fossil DNA of 31 horse specimens collected from across Europe, from Siberia to the Iberian Peninsula, the researchers found that six of the animals carried a mutation that causes modern horses to have white and black spots.
Of the remaining 25 specimens, 18 were brown coloured and six were black.
Dr Ludwig explained that all three of the horse colours - black, brown and spotted - depicted in the cave paintings have now been found to exist as real coat-colours in the ancient horse populations.
The researchers say that these three colours likely provided enough variation for humans to create the diversity of coat colours and patterns seen in modern horses.
The domestication of horses, which produced modern breeds, is thought to have begun about 4,600 years old in the steppe between modern Ukraine and Kazakhstan.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15619885
By Jennifer Carpenter Science reporter, BBC News
Scientists have found evidence that leopard-spotted horses roamed Europe 25,000 years ago alongside humans.
Until now, studies had only recovered the DNA of black and brown coloured coats from fossil specimens.
New genetic evidence suggests "dappled" horses depicted in European cave art were inspired by real life, and are less symbolic than previously thought.
The findings are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Horses, which were the most abundant large mammal roaming Eurasian 25,000 years ago, were a key component of early European diets.
So it is not surprising that the cave art of this time had a certain equestrian flare - horses make up 30% of the animals depicted in European cave paintings from this era.
Przewalski horse and domestic horses (Credit: PNAS) The Przewalski (far left) is the last remaining wild horse and a close relative of the domestic horse (three examples to the right)
Biologists, interested in the diversity of European animals before the last Ice Age, are interested in how accurately these early artistic impressions portrayed the colouring of the horses that lived alongside the ancient humans.
"It was critical to ensure that the horse depictions from the cave paintings were based on real-life experiences rather than products of the imagination," explained lead author Arne Ludwig from The Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin.
In previous work, Dr Ludwig, and his colleagues, recovered only the DNA of black and brown coat colours from the prehistoric horse bones.
But the dappled coats of the 25,000 year horses depicted at the Pech Merle cave complex in France convinced the team to take a second look.
Fur coats
By revisiting the fossil DNA of 31 horse specimens collected from across Europe, from Siberia to the Iberian Peninsula, the researchers found that six of the animals carried a mutation that causes modern horses to have white and black spots.
Of the remaining 25 specimens, 18 were brown coloured and six were black.
Dr Ludwig explained that all three of the horse colours - black, brown and spotted - depicted in the cave paintings have now been found to exist as real coat-colours in the ancient horse populations.
The researchers say that these three colours likely provided enough variation for humans to create the diversity of coat colours and patterns seen in modern horses.
The domestication of horses, which produced modern breeds, is thought to have begun about 4,600 years old in the steppe between modern Ukraine and Kazakhstan.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15619885
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- Mavourneen
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Re: Re: Horse racing 25 000 years ago
13 years 7 months ago
Interesting ... there's constant mutation of genes in a population, some of which will affect colour. Horses (or any animal) will be disadvantaged by colours that make them stand out from the herd, as that makes them easier targets for predators.
I'm sure most if not all the colours present today have arisen at some time in the past ... but before domestication they would have died out again pretty quickly. But after domestication, people might protect and prefer unusual colours and so they became more common. Look at how many colours and patterns we have of dogs and cats.
That said, a spotted colouring ... you wonder what advantage it could possible be to a horse. Maybe those horses lived in the forests not out on the open plains?
I'm sure most if not all the colours present today have arisen at some time in the past ... but before domestication they would have died out again pretty quickly. But after domestication, people might protect and prefer unusual colours and so they became more common. Look at how many colours and patterns we have of dogs and cats.
That said, a spotted colouring ... you wonder what advantage it could possible be to a horse. Maybe those horses lived in the forests not out on the open plains?
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