本帖最后由 choi 于 6-8-2017 15:12 编辑
People and horses l A Partner Like No Other; How an animal shaped human history. Economist, May 13, 2017
http://www.economist.com/news/bo ... n-conquer-world-how
(book review on two books: Susanna Forrest, The Age of the Horse; An equine journey through human history. Atlantic Monthly Press, 2017; Ulrich Raulff, Farewell to the Horse; The final century of our relationship. Allen Lane, 2017)
Note:
(a) "SIX THOUSAND years ago wild horses roamed the plains and steppes of the world [not in America continent, where they had become extinct]. * * * Then, in the Copper Age, the Botai people * * * domesticate[d] them. * * * Unusually, unlike almost all mammals other than humans, they sweat to cool themselves, which means they can work harder and run faster, for a long time."
(i) Ernest Frank Bailey and Samantha A Brooks, Horse Genetics. 2nd ed. Wallingford, Oxfordshire: CABI, 2013, at page 3.
https://books.google.com/books/a ... tml?id=CDv7AgAAQBAJ
Click the book cover to read.
(ii) Botai culture
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botai_culture
(c 3700–3100 BC; was named after the settlement of [ancient] Botai [people] in[present-day] Kazakhstan; pottery [reported in Outram AK et al, The Earliest Horse Harnessing and Milking. Science, 323: 1332–1335 (2009)])
This last attribute was central to the horse’s usefulness. Over the millennia, people have made full use of this equine companion, as two superb new books relate. “The Age of the Horse” by Susanna Forrest and “Farewell to the Horse” by Ulrich Raulff pay homage to the role of the horse in forging history—and more. Neither book purports to be a comprehensive equi-story; instead, by arranging their narratives thematically rather than chronologically, both authors have granted themselves the freedom to range as widely as the ancient wild horses, the Takhi and the Tarpan, once did, grazing on a pasture rich in anecdote, allegory and pathos as well as in
(b) "The bidet of French-bathroom fame was named after the 19th-century Parisian scrub horse (you straddle both). In the midst of the second world war, the Heck brothers, whipped on by Hermann Göring, traversed Europe to capture some of the last remaining wild ponies, from which they attempted to breed a genetically pure race to populate the parks of Berlin."
(i)
(A) bidet
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bidet
(pronunciation, etymology)
(B) bidet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidet
(section 7 Etymology)
(ii)
(A) an example of "scrub horse" (one Web entry used this term for pony, but it is not pony other than its "compact" size):
Robert W Furnas, Annual Report for the year of 1895. Nebraska State Board of Agriculture, Lincoln, Neb: Jacob North & Co, 1896, at page 216
https://books.google.com/books?i ... p;lpg=PA216&dq="scrub+horse"+compact&source=bl&ots=0pQ1zGMYDg&sig=dGDaXBg5O_Xga3ngLmdpxPNn0iQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi85oXYkK_UAhUE5oMKHdG8BVkQ6AEIIjAA#v=onepage&q=%22scrub%20horse%22%20compact&f=false
("The scrub horse will produce the scrub horse, and the scrub farmer will have the scrub stock that will lose him money, while th eprogressive farmer will produce the prize winners")
(B) definition:
* scrub (noun, often attributive)
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/scrub
* scrub (noun): "2.1 North American denoting an animal of inferior breed or physique <a scrub bull>"
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/scrub
(iii) Heck horse
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heck_horse
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