The answer is Caspain, and the breed is not one of the original four horses and pony's but merely a direct desendant.
Mizzy - Dun (HI1)
RacingLove (HI2)
No! The horses of prehistoric times were diminutive. They didn't have the long legs and sleek bodies.
The only true wild horse left in the world is the Przewalski's Pony, which unfortunately is now severely endangered. Unless we act soon and fast, there may not be any wild horses let in the world in the future! :'(
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.
Mustangs are not extinct, though they are being rounded up by the BLM, who hold horse auctions.
prehistoris horses r lot's smaller and they have more hooves
The eventual diet was grass and hay just like today.But the answer would depend on how prehistoric the horse was. The original horses were fox-sized browsers who ate leaves. Eventually they began to evolve into grazers, and during this period likely ate a variety of leaves and grasses. Once the evolutionary process was done, the horse was a full time grazer and its diet consisted of grass. Hay was not used until horses were fully domesticated and humans moved into growing crops.