- The
Botai culture is an
archaeological culture (c. 3700–3100 BC) of
prehistoric northern Central Asia. It was
named after the
settlement of
Botai in today's...
-
approximately 3500 BCE.
Discoveries in the
context of the
Botai culture had
suggested that
Botai settlements in the
Akmola Province of
Kazakhstan are the...
-
status was
called into
question when
domestic horses of the 5,000-year-old
Botai culture of
Central Asia were
found to be more
closely related to Przewalski's...
-
Botai (Kazakh: Ботай,
Botai) is a
village in
Aiyrtau District,
North Kazakhstan Region, Kazakhstan. Its KATO code is 593246200. The
village gives its...
-
since the
Paleolithic era. The
Botai culture (3700–3100 BC) is
credited with the
first domestication of horses. The
Botai po****tion
derived most of their...
-
horses could be the
feral descendants of the
domestic Botai horses. The
study concluded that the
Botai animals appear to have been an
independent domestication...
- and agriculture,
giving rise to the Atbasar, Kelteminar,
Botai, and Ust-Narym cultures. The
Botai culture (3600–3100 BC) is
credited with the
first domestication...
-
domestication at
Botai" (PDF).
Retrieved 26
April 2024. Outram, Alan K. (2023). "Horse
domestication as a multi-centered, multi-stage process:
Botai and the role...
-
Archaeological investigations of the
Botai culture of
ancient Kazakhstan have
revealed traces of milk in
bowls from the site of
Botai,
suggesting the domestication...
-
strong cir****stantial
evidence that
horse were
ridden by
people of the
Botai culture during the
Copper Age,
circa 3600-3100 BCE. The
earliest evidence...