It depends on how 'prehistoric' you mean. Horses were introduced by Europeans.
Answer2:
Horses evolved over the North American and Eurasian continents before going extinct in North America during the last ice age. They were reintroduced by the Spanish Explorers in the 1500's.
Yes, Prehistoric horses became extinct in North America during the Ice Age. Recent research has suggested that their extinction was either climate related or human induced. The Spanish brought over horses to the America's in the 15th century - as can be reinforced by multiple indigenous American accounts of Spanish arrival.
Eurasia. However prehistoric horses actually originated from North America, and it is likely that some herds, before going extinct, probably moved into Eurasia when the Land bridge between North America and what is now Russia was present, evolving into the modern horse of Equus calabus.
I might not be writing this in order but, here are some times I do remember when they used horses. - Romans -Egyptians -colonial times -ECT *I think you should look it up at this site : WWW.the history of horseback riding .com
horses actually came from america, 60 million years ago. In 1592 the spanish actually re-introduced them to america.
yes, there were native horses, but then they became extinct and stayed extinct, until the Spaniards brought them back to America. =D
No! The horses of prehistoric times were diminutive. They didn't have the long legs and sleek bodies.
No
Yes. The last evidence of prehistoric horses in North America were gone before 7000 BC. They have evolved a lot. They started out small than a dog.
No horses originated
No, the Spaniards did not bring horses to the Aztec Indians, actually, there were wild horses already in N. America that crossed with the prehistoric peoples of Asia across the Bering Strait. Hope this helps!
The Spanish re-introduced horses to North, Central and South America, where the prehistoric horse population had become extinct many thousands of years earlier.
Allen Dart has written: 'Prehistoric irrigation in Arizona' -- subject(s): Agriculture, Agriculture, Prehistoric, Indians of North America, Irrigation, Prehistoric Agriculture
There are no prehistoric breeds in these 2 regions.
NO
Yes, because they had tiger blood...
There are no prehistoric horses in these two regions.
Prehistoric horses were much smaller. The horses we see today have one toe ( the hoof) and a remnant of another (the chestnut). Horses from that time had multiple toes, and as they evolved, they had less and less toes. To answer your question, that would be no. Horses in these periods are much faster that they were then.