I suppose it would have been lush and green, 'cause they lived in small forests that time, and they were omnivores. They were no bigger than wolfhounds.
Yes horses were here over 65 million years ago and they looked pretty much the same except they had toes.
Many people have horses, like I do. Let's just put it this way, proably from 5 million to 10 million are what people use.
primates and possums have been on earth for 70 million years but monkeys evolved around 60/50 million years ago and 50 million years ago there horses the size of cats and dogs there was hedgehogs as well and whale that looked a bit like a cross between an otter and a crocodile
This depends. If you are like most Christians, they believe that horses were there in the first week of the world. Ont the 6th day, he put all land animals on the earth, and this includes horses. If you are not a Chirstian, scientists believe that the first ancestor of the horse was here about 55 million years ago.
well horses can not see forward like we can so they can see their stomache, and the rider, so it helps them when they can hear I ♥ horses
Horses are pack animals, so they do not like to be alone. They also can live anywhere because they are so quick at adapting to new surroundings.
Some horses do. Zebras evolved to blend in to their environment, probably sun and shade. Prehistoric 3 toed horses merged into their background also. The domestic horses that we have today have thousands of years of selective breeding at the whim of humans. We have bred them with the colors that appeal to us. Left to their own devices they would most likely not have the same coat colors that humans like.
As old as history itself, at least a few million years.
It is now known what North America look like 100 million years from now.
60 million years ago Canada was a mass of ice.
All animals (including humans) have a natural lifespan, the lifespan for a horses is 25-35 years. i have a horse that is 40 years old and in good health
Yes, female horses, like all horses, have two nostrils.