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In this episode of Ethnocynology, host David Ian Howe sits down with archaeologist and anthropologist Dr. William Taylor (University of Colorado Boulder), author of Hoofbeats: How Horses Shaped Human History.
While this show usually focuses on dogs, today we shift to the other animal that transformed humanity: the horse. Dr. Taylor walks us through the evolutionary history of horses, their domestication on the Eurasian steppe, and their reintroduction to the Americas after the Ice Age. Together we explore how humans first interacted with horses—as prey, symbols in cave art, sources of milk and meat, and eventually as partners in transport, warfare, and belief systems.
Hoofbeats: How Horses Shaped Human History by Dr. William Taylor — available on Amazon and other retailers.
Topics include:
The origins of domestic horses around 2000 BC in the Caucasus steppes
Horses evolving in North America, going extinct, and being reintroduced by the Spanish
Hunting evidence from sites like Schöningen in Germany and Bluefish Caves in the Yukon
Horses in Paleolithic cave art (Lascaux, Chauvet) and the Vogelherd ivory carving
Evidence for early horse riding and chariot use in Egypt, Assyria, and beyond
The role of horses in indigenous North and South American societies before widespread European contact
Ethno-equine parallels in Mongolia, Australia, and Patagonia, where horses shaped cultural, spiritual, and economic life
This is Part 1 of a two-part series: next time, David speaks with Cassidy Thornhill of the University of Wyoming, who researches the protohistoric introduction of horses into the Americas.
If you enjoy the episode, please rate and review Ethnocynology on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. It helps more people discover the show and supports the entire Archaeology Podcast Network.
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Chapters:
0:00 Intro and Dr. Wiliam Taylor
2:43 Horse domestication areas
4:40 Early evolutionary history / The Americas
6:34 Earliest human-horse interactions / Hunting / Art
10:47 Were horses milked?
13:36 The Vogelherd Horse
17:05 Curiosity Box
18:59 Horse reintroduction into the Americas
24:30 Indigenous horse interactions
28:17 Do horses do so well because they are from here?
30:49 How do we find horses archaeologically?
34:30 Horse back riding origins / Egypt / Chariots
41:29 Ethoequineology: Mongolia
43:53 Ethoequineology: Australia
45:14 Ethoequineology: Patagonia
48:03 Closing Thoughts
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Ethnocynology is brought to you by the Archaeology Podcast Network and Howe and Why productions, LLC
Director: David Ian Howe
Producers: Chris Webster, Tristan Boyle, Rachel Roden, Ashleigh Airey
Podcast editors: Rachel Roden, Chris Webster
Video editor: David Ian Howe
Music: KNOWMADIC
Intro Animations: Ilene German
www.archpodnet.com
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Use code DAVID25 Or click the link below for 25% off your first Box with Curiosity Box
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So basically the indians exterminated horses before white man brought it back right ?
As far as this gentlemans beginning statement..he on the mark.. excited to see if he holds to the truth an facts.. it's exciting
My candidate is the chicken.
I probably would have put the cow second, as plowing was integral in adopting animal muscle for agricultural work. Even the PIE relied on plowing before they tamed horses.
Dogs suck
Only a guess, but I would say dogs are more important. They would be domesticated for protection from other animals and humans.
Dogs would be more habitat-friendly and more conducive to bonding. Horses on the other hand would be too large and get in the way of the TV when you are watching the "Flintstones".
So when did the Nav'i on Pandora get the horses?
Your slap bracelet with measurements is actually made from a section of an actual measuring tape lol
You say there are no/few human images. Off "hand" I can't think of any images more common and human than the hand