Horses have a limited colour range in vision. They have dichromatic vision, meaning they see the world in many shades of greys, browns, and yellows.
horses are not colourblind they just have less cones than humans in their eyes (cones produce colours ;) so they do see most but not all colours. nope it doesn't matter what colour a certain thing is...
horses are classified by breeds and colours, that have special names.
We see different colours because other colours are being absorbed.
purple
You See Colours was created on 2006-03-06.
Miniature horses can come in every color found in equines, there are no rules on color with Mini horses.
There are MANY many colours that horses come in: black, white, brown, chestnut, dun, buckskin, roan, spotted, etc.
They are different colours, such as black, brown, chestnut, white and so on.
They can see all the colours, but a bit brighter because it is their first time seeing these colours.
The cone-shaped cells in the eyes detect colours.
The cone-shaped cells in the eyes detect colours.
The answer is 10 millon colours in the world that we can see, about 11 millon colours that a computer has, but, there are actually a lot of colours, and I can say it's infinty. There is alot of colours.