Before the flood everyone were vegetarians!! probably ate what horses eat today.
Answer:
The very early ancestors of horses such as Condylarth, were a dog-sized, five-toed creature that lived about 75 million years ago during the early Eocene period. These evolved into the predecessor of modern horses (Eohippus) which inhabited the open grasslands. From that time unto this horses have been vegetarians living on a diet composed mainly of grass.
The earliest horses were browsers, much like modern goats are. They would eat leaves, bark, a little grass, and weeds. As they evolved horses began to eat more and more grass, just like modern horses do now.
No! The horses of prehistoric times were diminutive. They didn't have the long legs and sleek bodies.
No
No horses originated
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.
prehistoris horses r lot's smaller and they have more hooves
fish.
prehistoric sharks eat whales, other sharks and mollusks. But the megalodon eats any kind of living organism
all horses can eat hay/grass. all horses can eat hay/grass.