The genetic switch that 'really lets horses have their cake and eat it too.’ By Lauren Leffer Published Mar 27, 2025 2:00 PM EDT Get the Popular Science daily ...
Modern veterinary practices have proven instrumental to the Nigerian horse breeding industry, with traditional methods being relied upon predominantly before this breakthrough. Today, modern ...
Nikos Solounias (left) and Matthew Mihlbachler (right) record tooth cusp sharpness in fossil horses at the American Museum of Natural History. This image relates to an article that appeared in the ...
The domestication of horses is a much more recent even compared to other domesticated species; horses were domesticated about 4,500 years ago, which was about 5,000 years after the domestication of ...
Przewalski's horses cloned from a stallion that died in 1998 could help reintroduce much needed diversity to the species that was once declared extinct in the wild. When you purchase through links on ...
Made possible by the Kayden Book Award, the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, The Center of the American West, and the Center for Asian Studies. Will Grant is an author and journalist ...
This isa mesowear "ruler" developed for scoring dental mesowear on fossil equids, consisting of seven Equus cusp apices cast onto an epoxy surface. The "ruler" is used by matching the cusp apex of a ...
The gene and resulting protein at the center of the adaptation isn’t just for horses– it also has serious clinical implications for health research. It’s possible that, by uncovering the mystery of ...