Arid Landscape Dept: I am a landed immigrant who was educated in European schools. We were taught that there once was a land bridge between North America and Asia. Thirty thousand years ago, mammoths immigrated using the bridge, followed by hunters; 12,000 years ago, Asian tribes immigrated. The ancestors of the horse emigrated from North America to Asia and Europe, where they were domesticated. They were brought back by Spanish conquistadors and later by European immigrants, according to Calgary Herald. Without Indian ponies, which were accustomed to the vast Prairies and the hot, arid landscape, the task could not have been fulfilled. In Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia, free-roaming horses are protected by provincial law and re: "They should shoot horses, shouldn't they?" Letter, April 9. In 1873, 300 members of the North West Mounted Police marched west to establish the law in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Nunavut. As
reported in the news.
@t indian ponies, spanish conquistadors
16.4.11