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The leg bones of the Botai horses are more slender than those of wild horses, indicating breeding for different qualities. And complex studies of ancient ceramic pots from the location showed evidence they once contained mare's milk. "This is, apart from being fascinating, something of a smoking gun for domestication
-- would you milk a wild horse?" said Outram. Anthony agreed: "If you're milking horses, they are not wild!" "The invention of a method to identify the fat residues left by horse milk in ceramic pots is a spectacular and brilliant advance," he said of Outram's paper. "It is really important to be able to identify the fats in the clay pots as not just from horse tissue, but precisely from horse milk." Still today mares are milked in Kazakhstan and Mongolia. "The Kazakhs ferment it into a sour tasting and slightly alcoholic drink called
'koumiss.' It is clear that dated back at least hundreds of years, but beyond that no one knew. Who would have thought it was a practice that went back 5,500 years, at least," Outram said. The new research was funded by Britain's Natural Environment Research Council, the British Academy and the U.S. National Science Foundation. ___ On the Net: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/
The new way of measuring and analyzing horse leg bones "shows here for the first time that the Botai culture horses were closer in leg conformation to domestic horses than to wild horses. That is another first," Anthony said.
[Associated
Press;
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