Wild horses did live in North America thousands of years ago, but they died out. The Spanish brought horses with them when they explored the continent. Some of these horses escaped and reproduced in the wild. These herds were called mustangs, because the Spanish word for stray is mestano.
Wild Mustangs are descendants of Spanish horses. When Christopher Columbus came to America, he brought with him horses. Many of these horses were turned loose and formed bands, or herds, and moved farther north into the USA. Only the toughest, hardiest horses survived and became what we know today the wild mustang.
However, some people say that a Spanish shipwreck in the gulf of Mexico lead to wild mustangs. The horses swam to shore and the few who made it formed bands, or herds.
If you mean where do wild mustangs live now, they live in western states like Nevada, Montana, Oregon, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, California, North Dakota, South Dakota. etc. They are quickly disappearing, though, because the BLM rounds them up and does it way too much. But that's just my opinion.
Well, i hope this helped!
They came from Arabia. That's where feral horses came from. ily:)
Wild mustangs? Well, there might be some in Colorado? But there are not really many left.
the feral horses came from Arabia
Feral horses run free.
The correct spelling is "feral". It is a wild horse. The mustang and the brumbie are feral horses.
Domestic horses are everywhere, but feral horses are found in small herds on the Outer Banks.
The Friesian horse is a domesticated breed of horse.
Horses developed over the North American and Eurasian continents. They did not come from one specific country and we reintroduced to the Americas by the Spanish explorers.
"Wild horses" are just feral horses. Is a feral cat the same thing as a cat? Yuuup
Southern california
Feral horses run free.
A feral horse is a free-roaming horse of domesticated ancestry. As such, a feral horse is not a wild animal in the sense of an animal without domesticated ancestors. However, some populations of feral horses are managed as wildlife, and these horses often are popularly called "wild" horses. Feral horses are descended from domestic horses that strayed, escaped, or were deliberately released into the wild and remained to survive and reproduce there. Away from humans, over time, these animals' patterns of behavior revert to behavior more closely resembling that of wild horses. Some horses that live in a feral condition but may be occasionally handled or managed by humans, particularly if privately owned, are referred to as "semi-feral."
Percherons are not feral horses.
Originally, they used small sledges called "travois", to carry objects. THese were pulled by dogs, since horses were not native to North America. (Horses arrived with the Spanish, and escaped horses formed packs and began to breed.) Native Americans were quick to tame and domesticate the feral stocks.
A mustang is one of the feral horses that inhabit much of America. (It is incorrect to call them wild horses as they are not truly wild; they are the descendants of horses belonging to Spanish settlers which have become feral.) A group of horses is called a herd.
Mustangs are feral horses that escaped or were set free back when they were first reintroduced to the USA. The escaped horses mostly of Iberian (Lusitano, Sorria, and andalusian, Jennet) Bloodlines formed herds and continued to breed.
The correct spelling is "feral". It is a wild horse. The mustang and the brumbie are feral horses.
Wild horses in North America are actually descendants of the horses that escapes when settlers settled the West, and because of this they are feral horses, not wild.
they can not eat acorns they are poisionous to them
The term Spanish horse is typically used for Andalusian or Pura Raza Espanola (PRE) horses. This breed is not wild or feral, but there were and are herds of feral/wild Sorraia horses in the Iberian Peninsula.