Chicken
Gallus Domesticus originated from Gallus Gallus the red jungle fowl native to southern Asia and the jungles of India. Gallus Gallus spread throughout the world when they were domesticated possibly in Thailand over 8,000 years ago.
The first wild chicken was the Red Jungle fowl and the Gray Jungle fowl Gallus Gallus was known to inhabit the jungles of Asia and northern India. The chicken we know today is called Gallus Domesticus.
Charles Darwin theorized that all chickens were descendants of a single wild species, the red jungle fowl, Gallus Bankiva. This species is found wild from India through Southeast Asia and the Philippines. It is now known through gene testing that they are also desendants of the Grey Jungle fowl of North India.
Gallus gallus Originally the wyandotte was known as the "American Seabright" or "Seabright Cochin" breed, the exact origin of the Wyandotte remains unknown. It is believed that the Silver Laced Wyandotte, which was the first Wyandotte variety accepted to the breed standard in 1883, originated in New York state. Experts believe that the original Wyandottes were bred by crossing Dark Brahmas with Spangled Hamburgs.
The classification of a chicken is: Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Aves, Order: Galliformes, Family: Phasianidae, Genus: Gallus, Species: G. Gallus. The subspecies is G. g. domesticus.
A class is a group of breeds originating in the same geographical area. The names themselves - American ,Asiatic, Mediterranean, etc. - indicate the region where the breeds originated. There are about 175 varieties of chickens grouped into 12 classes and approximately 60 breeds.The breeds and varieties of domestic chickens known today are believed to have descended mainly from the Red Jungle Fowl (Gallus bankiva, or Gallus gallus) Todays chickens are Gallus Domesticus.Breed means a group which possess a given set of physical features, such as body shape, skin color, carriage, and number of toes. Variety is a category of breed and is based on feather color, comb, or presence of a beard and muff. A strain is a group or breeding population within a variety or cross that has been bred and developed by a person or organization to possess certain desirable characteristics.
Florence, in the enchanting Tuscany region of Italy, is the ancestral home of the widely distinguished Galleon family. As a nickname-type surname, it reflects the physical characteristics or attributes of the first person to have had this name conferred upon them. The etymology indicates derivation from the Latin-language word "Gallus", meaning "rooster".
The Sanskrit word "Jangala" refers to uncultivated land and is the origin of the word jungle
From a Hindi word, Jangal, meaning desert, forest, wasteland or uncultivated ground
The orange is native to China and Indochina.
It is broken into poo and jari. poo comes from the slang word for feaces and jari is a shortened word for jumanji mean jungle in swahili. so the word means feaces jungle.
The chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) is a domesticated fowl, a subspecies of the Red Junglefowl. As one of the most common and widespread domestic animals, and with a population of more than 24 billion in 2003,[1] there are more chickens in the world than any other species of bird. Humans keep chickens primarily as a source of food, consuming both their meat and their eggs.The traditional poultry farming view of the domestication of the chicken is stated in Encyclopædia Britannica (2007): "Humans first domesticated chickens of Indian origin for the purpose of cockfighting in Asia, Africa, and Europe. Very little formal attention was given to egg or meat production... "[2] Recent genetic studies have pointed to multiple maternal origins in Southeast, East, and South Asia, but with the clade found in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East and Africa originating in the Indian subcontinent. From India the domesticated fowl made its way to the Persianized kingdom of Lydia in western Asia Minor, and domestic fowl were imported to Greece by the fifth century BC.[3] Fowl had been known in Egypt since the 18th Dynasty, with the "bird that lays every day" having come to Egypt from the land between Syria and Shinar, Babylonia, according to the annals of Tutmose III.[4]