- New York auction records expected for a Magritte... and a banana
- Egypt's middle class cuts costs as IMF-backed reforms take hold
- Beirut businesses struggle to stay afloat under Israeli raids
- Dupont lauds France 'pragmatism' in tight New Zealand win
- Swiatek leads Poland into maiden BJK Cup semi-final
- Trump taps fracking magnate and climate skeptic as energy chief
- West Indies restore pride with high-scoring win over England
- Hull clings to one-shot lead over Korda, Zhang at LPGA Annika
- Xi tells Biden ready for 'smooth transition' to Trump
- Trump nominates fracking magnate and climate skeptic as energy secretary
- Tyson says 'no regrets' over loss for fighting 'one last time'
- Springboks' Erasmus hails 'special' Kolbe after England try double
- France edge out New Zealand in Test thriller
- Xi tells Biden will seek 'smooth transition' in US-China ties
- Netherlands into Nations League quarter-finals as Germany hit seven
- Venezuela to free 225 detained in post-election unrest: source
- Late Guirassy goal boosts Guinea in AFCON qualifying
- Biden arrives for final talks with Xi as Trump return looms
- Dominant Sinner cruises into ATP Finals title decider with Fritz
- Dinosaur skeleton fetches 6 million euros in Paris sale
- Netherlands-Hungary Nations League match interrupted by medical emergency
- Kolbe double as South Africa condemn England to fifth successive defeat
- Kolbe at the double as South Africa condemn England to fresh defeat
- Kolbe at the double as South Africa beat England 29-20
- 'If I don't feel ready, I won't play singles,' says Nadal ahead of Davis Cup farewell
- Fifth of dengue cases due to climate change: researchers
- Trump's Republican allies tread lightly on Paris pact at COP29
- Graham equals record as nine-try Scotland see off tenacious Portugal
- Protesters hold pro-Palestinian march in Rio ahead of G20
- Graham equals record as nine-try Scotland see off dogged Portugal
- China's Xi urges APEC unity in face of 'protectionism'
- Japan's Kagiyama, Yoshida sweep gold in Finland GP
- Macron to press Milei on climate action, multilateralism in Argentina talks
- Fritz reaches ATP Finals title decider with Sampras mark in sight
- All eyes on G20 for breakthrough as COP29 climate talks stall
- Fritz battles past Zverev to reach ATP Finals title decider
- Xi, Biden to meet as Trump return looms
- Kane warns England must protect team culture under new boss
- Italy beat Japan to reach BJK Cup semi-finals
- Farmers target PM Starmer in protest against new UK tax rules
- Shiffrin masters Levi slalom for 98th World Cup win
- Italy's Donnarumma thankful for Mbappe absence in France showdown
- McIlroy in three-way tie for Dubai lead
- Bagnaia wins Barcelona MotoGP sprint to take season to final race
- Ukraine's Zelensky says wants to end war by diplomacy next year
- Shiffrin wins Levi slalom for 98th World Cup victory
- Israel pummels south Beirut as Lebanon mulls truce plan
- Religious Jews comfort hostages' families in Tel Aviv
- German Greens' Robert Habeck to lead bruised party into elections
- Johnson bags five as Australia beat Pakistan to seal T20 series
Horses part of Native American life earlier than thought: study
Native American people integrated horses into their communities much earlier than European colonial records suggest, according to an innovative study Thursday that combined archaeological and genetic analysis with Indigenous oral traditions.
The study is the first using both Western science and traditional knowledge to be published in the prestigious Science journal, the researchers said.
Based on European records from colonial times, historians have long contended that Native American people did not interact much with horses in the American West until the late 1600s.
Scholars often say the turning point was the Pueblo Revolt of 1680, when Indigenous people staged an uprising against Spanish colonisers in what is now New Mexico, releasing many European horses in the process.
However the new research, which traces the spread of horses from the American Southwest into the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains regions, contradicts this widely accepted theory.
The team analysed hundreds of horse remains using radiocarbon dating, DNA sequencing and other tools to demonstrate that the animals had spread widely across the American West in the early 1600s.
They also showed that the horses were raised, received veterinary care, and used for transport by Indigenous communities during that time.
This meant that horses were part of Native American social and ceremonial traditions "before any documented European presence in the Rockies or the Central Plains," the study said.
- 'Historic' -
The findings are consistent with a range of Indigenous oral histories that have long challenged the European account.
"Before this study, there was literally no place for Indigenous peoples in the Americas, or the horses we lived alongside and protected, in this conversation," said Yvette Running Horse Collin, a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation and co-author of the paper.
"This is due to the systems put in place by colonisation," she told a press conference in the southern French city of Toulouse.
Rather than one "scientific system dominating another," the research showed that "science can be utilised to heal and to unite rather than divide," she added.
William Taylor, an archaeologist at the University of Colorado and the study's first author, said that "a myopic, narrow focus on European perspectives has unfortunately limited our understanding collectively of the integration of horses into Indigenous societies".
Ludovic Orlando, a study co-author and paleogeneticist at France's national scientific research centre CNRS, said the research was "historic".
"We've brought traditional science to the cover" of Science, he told the press conference.
- 'Mutual language' -
While horses are known to have inhabited the Americas more than 12,000 years ago, Orlando said there is an "absence of fossils" between that time and the 1600s, the reason for which is not known.
The fossils from the 1600s covered by the research had Spanish or Portuguese ancestry, genetic analysis showed.
That would "fit well with acquisition from the conquistadors," Orlando said, adding that the discovery of more fossils could disprove this theory.
Orlando, who has previously used genetic analysis to disprove longstanding theories about the history of horses, was contacted by Lakota researchers in 2018.
Running Horse Collin then moved to the south of France for two years to work at the Centre for Anthropobiology and Genomics of Toulouse.
"I, as an Oglala Lakota scientist, was not asked to change my methods, methodology and conclusions," she said.
Orlando said that different theoretical approaches sometimes led him to reflect on how he communicated, which "was really not easy at several moments".
But he said they found "a mutual language" and intend to continue their scientific collaboration.
Study co-author Carlton Shield Chief Gover, a member of the Pawnee Nation, said in a statement that admiration for horses extends across borders.
"We can talk to one another through our shared love of an animal," he said.
D.Johnson--AT