Horses originally arrived in the new world the same way indians did, through the bering straight. But around 10,000 years ago the horses became
extinct in the americas. It would take thousands of years for horses to be reintroduced into america by the spanish conquistadors. Or would it? New
discoverys in california have uncovered a horse and a donkey. The radio-carbon dating has dated it to 50 years BEFORE the spanish ever set foot in
america. Both the donkey and horse were buried in the ground ritually which is very curious. So the question is why do we have a horse were there are
no horses as of 10,000 years before and 50 years after the horses death.
North County Times
Radiocarbon dating of 340 years, plus or minus 40 years, puts the death of the horse sometime between 1625 and 1705, Mojado said. Therefore, the
horses died at least 50 years before San Diego Mission de Alcala, the first of the California missions, was founded in 1769. The other horse and the
burro were buried at the same level, suggesting that they were buried about the same time.
......
The radiocarbon date, if corroborated by more elaborate tests, may be remarkable since North American horses were thought to have been extinct by the
late Pleistocene era more than 10,000 years ago, said Bradford Riney, a paleontology specialist with the San Diego Natural History Museum.
"That would make (the site) extremely important," he said Thursday. "It would be an early example of domestication."
This to me is extremely intriguing, either horses survived 10,000 years without being recorded in archeological records or some other people brought
the horse to america before the spanish, perhaps vikings.
Mod note: Although it is not a mythical beast, it is mysterious and defys explanation. So I chose to post it here.