Chestnut is a brown color that ranges from a red-ish brown to a golden-brown. What separatates chestnut from bay is that bay has a black mane and tail while a chestnut's mane and tail is the same color of the coat or lighter.
The chestnut, found on a horse on the inside of his front legs above the knees, is an off-white color.
There are only two basic horse colors - black and chestnut. All other colors are derived from these two colors.
The black horse's genetics is either aaEe or aaEE. If the Black horse is aaEE the foal cannot be chestnut. If the black horse is aaEe there is a 50% chance of the foal being chestnut. The possible colors for any non chestnut foal will be based on the genetics of the chestnut horse at the Agouti site. if the chestnut horse is aa any non chestnut foal will be black if the chestnut horse is Aa there is a 50% chance of a bay foal and a 50% chance of a black foal. if the chestnut horse is AA any non-chestnut foal will be bay.
Assuming you are referring to the horse colors. Liver is a darker form of chestnut and therefore there is no 'cross' between them. The shade of chestnut inherited by a foal is purely genetic.
The three basic colors are Black, Bay, and Chestnut. Black and Chestnut are the basic colors that all horses are born with, however the Agouti gene effects the spread of black pigment (limiting it or not) Which can create a bay horse. After that other modifier genes can act on those three basic colors to create a very wide variety of colors.
No the horse(s) that played Secretariat are chestnut. Whilst Joey is a bay, two different colors. But one of the horses in War Horse did play Seabiscuit.
Horse chestnut, or chestnut horse translated to Hindi is ban khaur, or hars chesTanaT. It is the nutlike seed of a tree.
It depends on whether the stallion or mare is homogeneous for a certain color gene. You could have many possibilities, but a logical predication would be either palomino, chestnut, white, or bay. (Bay and chestnut being the two most common horse colors.)
If you mean the American breed of cart horse, they are usually chestnut.
Chestnut is a color and not a breed. Most breeds of horse come in chestnut along with many other colors. So yes Chestnut horses can come from America, but they also come from everywhere else.
It is the horse chestnut that produces conkers.
The Horse Chestnut is an Angiosperm.
Horse-chestnut leaf miner was created in 1986.