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Before Horses Were Horses

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As man evolved, he discovered the horse had another use, he could climb on its back and ride it. ... The Mongols used the horse to overrun and conquer Europe. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Before Horses Were Horses


1
Before Horses Were Horses
  • American Quarter Horse
  • Hall of Fame Museum

2
  • 60 million
  • years ago
  • 40 million
  • years ago
  • 20 million
  • years ago
  • 6 million years
    ago

Evolution of the Horse
3
Eohippus
  • The four-toed Eohippus, 60 million years ago, was
    one of the first ancestors of the modern day
    horse.
  • He was 14" high. (about the size of a cat!)

TOES
4
Pliohippus
  • Over the next 54 million years, the Eohippus
    directly evolved into the Pliohippus.
  • This one-toed horse was 4 x the size and grew to
    be 48 inches.

TOES
5
  • The Pliohipuus was the ancestor to the zebras,
    domestic and wild donkeys, and to the wild horses
    such as the Przewalski's Horse.
  • The still existing Przewalski (sha-val-ski) and
    its wild counterparts, the Tarpan, Tundra and
    Forest Horse
  • lead to the
  • Modern Horse.

6
The Modern Horses
  • Zebra
  • Donkey
  • Przewalski horse
  • The modern horse

7
Starting from the bottom, you can see how the
horse evolved into what it is today.
Eqqus
Merychippus
Miohippus
Hyracotherium
8
Horses and Early Man
  • Early Man was familiar with the horse and
    probably hunted it for food. As man evolved, he
    discovered the horse had another use, he could
    climb on its back and ride it. He could hitch it
    to a chariot and make war. The Mongols used the
    horse to overrun and conquer Europe. It became
    man's transportation and his great source of
    pleasure.

9
How did this happen?
  • Men today werent alive to see the ancestors of
    the modern horse, Eohippus, Pliohippus, etc. So
    how do scientists know they existed for sure?

Erosion!
Erosion The group of natural processes,
including weathering, dissolution, abrasion,
corrosion, and transportation, by which material
is worn away from the earth's surface.
10
The Process of Erosion
  • 100 million years ago Scallops and other
    invertebrates inhabited the sea in this area.
    When they die, they are covered by
  • sand that settles on them.

11
  • 75 million years ago Pressure compacts the
    loose sandy sediments into hard sandstone.
    Dinosaurs now live, and die, in the locality.
    Like the scallops before them, their bodies are
    covered by sand..

12
  • 50 million years ago There is a tremendous
    volcanic eruption in the area. The ash thickly
    covers the land, and for a while the land cannot
    support much life.

13
  • 20 million years ago A Parahippus, a 3-toed
    horse common at the time, dies in the area. Like
    the other creatures before it, its body is buried
    in sand and sediments by wave action.

14
  • 3 million years ago The massive force of an
    earthquake causes layers of sediments to tilt and
    push upward.

15
  • Today Forces of erosion, such as water moving
    against rock for millions of years, gradually
    wears away the land surface and a few of the rock
    layers beneath it. The fossilized bones of the
    horse, hidden for millions of years, are exposed
    above the ground.

16
Evolution Erosion
  • Of the two things discussed today, evolution and
    erosion, what characteristics do they have in
    common?
  • Both take place over long periods of time
  • Change isnt noticed immediately.
  • Both aid scientists to learn more.

17
Resources
  • http//www.riovistaproducts.com/exper/history/hist
    .html
  • http//www.thefurtrapper.com/indian_horse.htm
  • http//www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/vertpaleo/fhc/rela
    tives11.htm
  • http//www.winridgefarm.com/zippos_old_gold/zog_pr
    ofile.jpg
  • http//cache.eb.com/eb/image?id55003
  • http//www.das.psu.edu/user/dasHistory/images/imag
    es/29.jpg
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