• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

World’s First Animal Hybrids Were Created By Ancient Mesopotamians 4,500 Years Ago

January 29, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A donkey-ass hybrid from Bronze Age Mesopotamia is the earliest known example of a hybrid animal bred by people. The bones of the horse-like creatures date back 4,500 years and put to bed decades of dispute surrounding the ancient equids’ identity.

After meticulous DNA sequencing, the team from the Institut Jacques Monod (CNRS/Université de Paris), believe that the bones belong to a kunga – a cross between a female domestic donkey and a male wild ass.

Advertisement

The bones of 25 animals – now known to be kungas – were discovered in Tell Umm el-Marra, a royal tomb in northern Syria, in 2006. The complete skeletons looked like horses, but they had different proportions, which puzzled archaeologists, as did the fact that horses weren’t introduced in the area until 500 years later.

The enigmatic equids are also seen in ancient texts and icons from Mesopotamia, where they are depicted being used in “diplomacy, ceremony, and warfare”. Larger kungas were used to pull vehicles, while their smaller friends were used in agriculture, pulling ploughs, for example.

Nineveh panel “hunting wild asses” (645-635 BCE) shows hemiones being captured.

Nineveh panel “hunting wild asses” (645-635 BCE) shows wild asses being captured.

Image credit: © Eva-Maria Geigl / IJM / CNRS-Université de Paris

But it wasn’t until the team behind the new study compared their genomes with those of other species that they were able to determine what exactly these mysterious animals were. The skeletons didn’t belong to horses, asses, or onagers – Asian wild asses – leading the researchers to hypothesize they could be a hybrid.

To confirm this, they sequenced DNA from an 11,000-year-old equid bone found in Turkey and 19th-century teeth and hair from the last-surviving Syrian wild asses. They found the skeletons in Syria had the maternal lineage of the domestic donkey (Equus africanus) and the paternal lineage of the Syrian wild ass (E. hemionus). 

Advertisement

Researchers believe this mix might have provided the perfect combination of donkey temperament and wild ass speed. The resulting kunga would have been stronger and faster than a donkey, but more easily tamed than an ass. They are also thought to have cost up to six times as much as a donkey.

A savvy little scheme from an early Syro-Mesopotamian civilization that clearly had an advanced understanding of breeding.

“It is surprising to see that these ancient societies envisioned something so complex as hybrid breeding, since this was an intentional act: they had the domestic donkey, they knew they cannot domesticate the Syrian wild ass, and they did not domesticate horses,” co-author Eva-Maria Geigl told Gizmodo. 

“So, they intentionally developed a strategy to breed two different species to combine different characters that they found desirable in each of the parent species.”

Advertisement

This was no mean feat, as hybrid animals – the sturddlefish and whaluga, for example – are mostly (but not always) sterile, meaning each kunga must have been intentionally bred into existence.

The extra hassle may explain the eventual extinction of the kunga. The arrival of the domestic horse 4,000 years ago provided Mesopotamian societies with a similarly strong and fast animal to utilize, and one that was much easier to reproduce.

In the millennia since the kunga’s creation, humans have bred all sorts of weird and wonderful hybrids into existence, from the chonky Beefalo to tasty Iron Age pigs – but it all started with this now-extinct equid, the world’s first human-bred hybrid animal. 

The study is published in the journal Science Advances.

Advertisement

An earlier version of this article was published in January 2022.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soldiers say Guinea constitution, gov’t dissolved in apparent coup
  2. Rivian announces membership plan with complimentary charging and LTE connectivity
  3. Czech central bank shocks with 75 basis-point interest rate increase
  4. Megaslumps Explained: Their Impact And Threat To Earth’s Future

Source Link: World's First Animal Hybrids Were Created By Ancient Mesopotamians 4,500 Years Ago

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Brain Implant Enables Paralyzed Man To Feel And Use Objects Using Someone Else’s Hands
  • “This Is A Really Big Deal”: Brain Training Significantly Improves Key Neurochemical Levels In World First
  • “Wholly Unexpected”: First-Ever Fossil Paranthropus Hand Raises Questions About Earliest Tool Makers’ Identity
  • For Centuries, Nobody Knew Why Swiss Cheese Has Holes. Then, The Mystery Was Solved.
  • Scientists Studied The Infamous “Chicago Rat Hole” And They Have Some Bad News
  • Massive 166-Million-Year-Old Sauropod Footprints Become The Longest Dinosaur Trackway In Europe
  • Do Spiders Dream? “After Watching Hundreds Of Spiders, There Is No Doubt In My Mind”
  • IFLScience Meets: ESA Astronaut Rosemary Coogan On Astronaut Training And The Future Of Space Exploration
  • What’s So Weird About The Methuselah Star, The Oldest We’ve Found In The Universe?
  • Why Does Red Wine Give Me A Headache? Many Scientists Blame It On The Grape Skins
  • Manta Rays Dive Way Deeper Than We Thought – Up To 1.2 Kilometers – To Explore The Seas
  • Prof Brian Cox Explains What He Finds “Remarkable” About Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Story
  • Pioneering “Pregnancy Test” Could Identify Hormones In Skeletons Over 1,000 Years Old
  • The First Neolithic Self-Portrait? Stony Human Face Emerges In 12,000-Year-Old Ruins At Karahan Tepe
  • Women Are Diagnosed With ADHD 5 Years Later Than Men, Even With Worse Symptoms
  • What Is Cryptozoology? We Explore The History And Mystery Of This Controversial Field
  • The Universe’s “Red Sky Paradox” Just Got Darker: Most Stars Might Never Host Observers
  • Uranus And Neptune May Not Be “Ice Giants” But The Solar System’s First “Rocky Giants”
  • COVID-19 Can Alter Sperm And Affect Brain Development In Offspring, Causing Anxious Behavior
  • Why Do Spiders’ Legs Curl Up Like That When They’re Dead?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version