Horse domestication didn't happen the way we think it did

New analyses of bones, teeth, genetics and artifacts suggest it's time to revise a long-standing hypothesis for how humans domesticated horses.

A photo of two horses walking among sand dunes
Horses supported travel, communication, agriculture and warfare across much of the ancient world.
(Image credit: Wolfgang Kaehler via Getty Images)

Across human history, no single animal has had a deeper impact on human societies than the horse. But when and how people domesticated horses has been an ongoing scientific mystery.

Half a million years ago or more, early human ancestors hunted horses with wooden spears, the very first weapons, and used their bones for early tools. During the late Paleolithic era, as far back as 30,000 years ago or more, ancient artists chose wild horses as their muse: Horses are the most commonly depicted animal in Eurasian cave art.

William Taylor
Assistant Professor and Curator of Archaeology, University of Colorado Boulder

Dr. Taylor is an archaeozoologist at the University of Colorado, specializing in the study of horse and large animal domestication. Since 2011, he has conducted archaeological fieldwork in Mongolia and the Eurasian Steppe, with other research projects centered on ancient human-horse relations in China, Kyrgyzstan, Australia, and the Americas. Taylor is particularly interested in the application of emerging technologies, such as 3D scanning and biomolecular techniques, to archaeological questions.