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Horses, donkeys, mules, elephants and camels.
Ships and boats, carts, coaches, pack animals and riding horses, camels, donkeys and mules, their feet.
Domesticated camels are more docile than their wild counterparts, as is the case with horses, but they are still known to spit, kick, and bite when provoked or frightened. Answer Anything I have read is that they are uniquely ill-tempered.
Their own feet and horses were the most common modes of transportation. Horses could be ridden or else pull wagons, carts and sleds. Oxen, asses,donkeys,camels and elephants were also used as draft animals.
cattle, wheat, donkeys, barley and that all i got
Mules are larger and stronger than donkeys, generally more sturdy and sure footed than horses, camels would be very unpopular and there are no buses or taxis.
They could be a pet but you would have to live in the desert. Otherwise they couldn't survive. WHAT??? A camel is specially adapted to survive in a desert...it does not require a desert to survive. As for "pet"...obviously you can't keep it in the house, but you can have one the way you have a horse or goat if you have a permit. There are camels in petting zoos and some are even used the way therapeutic horses are used, sometimes with even better results.
horses or donkeys
Mostly horses and elephants and donkeys.
Actually the earliest people in the Americas did have horses available, but they used them as a source of food not as "beasts of burden", this hunting drove the American horses into extinction.Without "beasts of burden" the people of the Americas used either dogs or had to carry loads themselves. In South America the llamas (relatives of camels) were domesticated as "beasts of burden".
Actually the earliest people in the Americas did have horses available, but they used them as a source of food not as "beasts of burden", this hunting drove the American horses into extinction.Without "beasts of burden" the people of the Americas used either dogs or had to carry loads themselves. In South America the llamas (relatives of camels) were domesticated as "beasts of burden".
They used camels, sheep and donkeys to help them make clothes, travel, and farm.