Spotted Horses May Have Roamed Europe 25,000 Years Ago
sciencehabit writes with an excerpt from Science: "About 25,000 years ago, humans began painting a curious creature on the walls of European caves. Among the rhinos, wild cattle, and other animals, they sketched a white horse with black spots. Although such horses are popular breeds today, scientists didn't think they existed before humans domesticated the species about 5000 years ago. Now, a new study of prehistoric horse DNA concludes that spotted horses did indeed roam ancient Europe, suggesting that early artists may have been reproducing what they saw rather than creating imaginary creatures."
We (in Europe) prefer to call them cows.
Damn, and I was rooting for psychedelic use among cave painters.
While spotted horses once ran and roamed the fertile plains of Europe, they may have been a small subset of the total horse population. Maybe the spotted horses were made fun of. Maybe the cave-people laughed as they graced the walls of caves with their likeness. It's never been easy to be different, and possibly the cave-people just wanted to say to history.. 'we have diversity too'. Or, maybe not. Maybe all the horses were spotted. Maybe some were striped, or perhaps looked like a Palomino. Would we feel differently then? Actually, the cave-people drew what they saw because they were cave-people. They weren't drawing imaginary cities or imaginary trees... How is this news really? Spotted horses are great, if you like horses.
Also, Dear Slashdot: Please get a Google + page and post these article to Google plus, so I don't ever have to visit the darkside of the force of facebook again. Thank you. :)
I always thought those "spotted horses" were supposed to be female Fallow Deer.
According to a rumor I just made up, Harry potter has been Lobbying for their recognition for a while
Never antropomorphize computers, they do not like that
...humans began painting a curious creature on the walls of European caves. Among the rhinos...
Did I miss a memo?
So these cavemen were horse-spotters! Bwahahaha.
Animals using camouflage before humans appeared on this planet?
I don't believe it.
You can't handle the truth.
how much many modern people assume our primitive ancestors were total morons who had more in common with a screaming chimp than modern humans in their ability to grasp what they saw happening around them. How fucking arrogant do you have to be to believe that they were just making up something like this instead of perhaps prizing the spotted horses as more aesthetically pleasing to their sensibilities?
When you look at what many of the "scientifically-minded" believed in the 19th and early 20th century like phrenology, eugenics, "the noble savage" and a host of other things it is downright shocking that any remotely history-literate person can be so arrogant.
It is interesting how we like to see Cavemen as dumb unsophisticated creatures. They were just as smart if not smarter then us today. The key difference was they didn't discover a lot of technology we take advantage of. How many of us will know to find metal ore. If you did find it how many would be using it in a fire hot enough to melt it.. Still after you melted it and find ways of molding it. You will probably be only using for jewelry, until you figure out more of its properties. A lot of these early discoveries were just random luck. And it could take a few generations before these random chances clicked.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
Knabstrups are ok too.
The best horse I ever owned was an Appaloosa. He died two years ago at the age of 36. Good old Snout.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
A unicorn is simply a rhinoceros. They were never imaginary.
"I am innately skeptical of "symbolism" when it comes to most ancient art (see e.g., the destruction of the "mother goddess" theory - http://dienekes.blogspot.com/2009/09/mother-goddess-figurines-theory.html). So, an article that shows that ancient artists painted horses as they saw them, and did not put dots on them for some strange symbolic reason, is very welcome."
From Dienekes' anthropology blog:
http://dienekes.blogspot.com/2011/11/cave-painters-painted-spotted-horses-as.html
What about LSD?
Yours In Minsk,
K. Trout
Dale Guthrie's book The Nature of Paleolithic Art covers this very issue. He makes a compelling argument that the cave paintings are representative of what paleolithic peoples experienced. He looks at the issue of horse markings particularly. It's a good book.
Surely we need a Darwin icon here, not Einstein... Unless of course the horses were the result of some nuclear testing done by time travellers from the 24th century.