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Horses Home WHAT IS A HORSE? They gallop and trot, whinny and neigh, capturing our imagination -- and our hearts. Indeed, horses are said to have done more to change human history than any other domestic animal, once upon a time carrying explorers to new frontiers and mighty armies to great conquests.
Though their glory days may be in the past, these hoofed creatures
continue to enthrall us, as the NATURE program HORSES demonstrates in
sparkling detail. From the steppes of Mongolia, where children race
at breakneck speeds perched on stallions ten times their size, to the
fields of Georgia, where people confined to wheelchairs find new freedom
in the saddle, HORSES highlights the many roles played by this multi-talented
beast of burden. There are also rare glimpses of the world's most endangered
horse, and an inside look at the art of the horse whisperers, the trainers
who through their gentle touch can transform a wild bucking bronco into
a stately show horse.
When fossil hunters first discovered the bones of this creature a century
ago, they named it Eohippus -- "the dawn horse" -- and believed it was
the first link in an evolutionary chain that led directly to today's
horse. Indeed, many museums and textbooks still have displays and pictures
showing this neat, predictable progression, with horses gradually getting
larger, shifting from many toes to modern hooves, and gaining longer
teeth able to grind down tough prairie grasses.
Less than 10,000 years ago, however, many of these horse-like species became extinct, along with other browsing animals such as mammoths. Climate changes and over-hunting by humans may have been to blame, but no one knows for sure. The only survivors were horses in Asia and several zebras. In North America, however, horses were wiped out. So where did the modern horses come from, the ones that spawned America's cowboy myth? Historians believe that Spanish explorers brought the animals with them on their voyages to the New World in the 1500s. Let loose upon the land, they soon reclaimed the prairies that had once been theirs alone, producing vast herds of wild horses. Even today, as HORSES shows, tens of thousands of wild horses roam
the American West. To prevent the herds from destroying their habitat,
the U.S. government captures hundreds each year and puts them up for
adoption. For some of the proud new owners, the chance to ride a wild-born
horse is a dream come true -- and the continuation of an age-old relationship
that has made the horse one of our most revered and fascinating animal
partners. What Is A Horse? | Riding to Freedom | Horsepower | Resources NATURE Home | Previous Features Menu
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