The stifle is the femoro-tibial joint, which in humans is commonly called the knee.
The stifle on a horse is the equivalent of a human knee.
A horse's stifle is equal to the knee of a human.
knee
The knee.
The stifle of a horse is anatomically equivalent to the knee of a human - it is a hinge joint consisting of the distal femur, proximal tibia, proximal fibula and the patella (kneecap).
The horses stifle is directly behind the flank.
From About.com: Underlying the stifle area is the stifle joint formed between the large hip bone (femur) which is equivalent to our thigh bone and the tibia, equivalent to our shin bone. The stifle joint somewhat resembles a human knee.
A horse's hock is located on the back legs of the horse. It is the joint that would act as a knee for the horse and is the large joint located about half way up the horse's leg. Additional information: in comparative anatomy the hock joint is equivalent to a human ankle so it bends backward instead of forward. The stifle joint in a horse actually the same as a human knee joint.
The nose it build the same, for appaloosas the out side color of the eye is a human eye. Look up a picture they have the white around it just like us.
The same thing that ventricles do in a human heart.
yes it's part boarding a horse where 2 or more people rent the same horse for less money.
Chestnuts on a horse are made of the same basic material as the horn of the horse's hoof. It is not particularly digestible by a human.