Aurochs

Cave painting: aurochs
Most or all modern cattle are direct descendants of the aurochs; the South Asian domestic cattle, the zebu, may be descended from a related species, the gaur. Modern cattle have become much smaller than their wild forebears: the height at the withers of a domesticated cow is about 1.4 meters, whereas an aurochs could reach about 1.75 meters.
Aurochs are depicted in many Paleolithic European cave paintings such as those found at Lascaux and Livernon in France, indicating the former range of this formidable beast, whose life force may have been attributed with magical qualities, for early carvings of the aurochs have also been found. The impressive and dangerous aurochs survived into the Iron Age in Anatolia and the Near East, and was worshiped throughout that area as a sacred animal, the Lunar Bull, associated with the Great Goddess and later with Mithra. In the area of the southern Caucasus and northern Mesopotamia, domestication of the aurochs was undertaken from about 5000 BCE.
A 1999 archaeological dig in Peterborough, England, uncovered the skull of an aurochs but the front part of the skull had been removed but the horns remained attached. The supposition is that the killing of the aurochs in this instance was a sacrificial act.
The last recorded live aurochs was reportedly hunted and killed by poachers in 1627 in the JaktorÃÂów Forest, Poland.
In the 1920s two German zookeepers— brothers by the names of Heinz and Lutz Heck— attempted to breed the aurochs back into existence from the domestic cattle that were their descendants. Their plan was based on the pre-Darwinian conception of "atavism" in which "primitive" traits might reappear as "throwbacks" to an earlier form. The result is the breed called Heck Cattle, or "Recreated Aurochs" or "Heck Aurochs", which bears an incomplete physical resemblance to what is known about the wild aurochs.
| Table of contents |
|
2 See also 3 External links |
References
See also
External links
