The Spaniards
Columbus brought horses on his second trip to No. America in 1493.
depending on the wealth of standard, usually only one cattle animal for food such as a cow or goat, sometimes donkeys for riding, so yeah
gold :D
Yes they did.Many historians believe that most of the development of horses began in North America. Scientists believe that the first horses (called Pliohippus) to evolve in North America appeared about 6 million years ago. For some unknown reason, horses (Equus) disappeared from the western hemisphere and were re-introduced by spanish explorers (after Columbus) in the sixteenth century.
The conquistadors traveled to modern day Florida, Cuba, Dominican Republic, almost all of south america, and all of central america to claim land in the name of their mother country, Spain.
YES
Columbus brought horses on his second trip to No. America in 1493.
Horses were brought to America by the conquistadors. Therefore they were not in North America during the ice age.
Horses first returned with the Conquistadors, beginning with Columbus, who imported horses from Spain to the West Indies on his second voyage in 1493.
To be ridden: Horses were originally brought to America by the Conquistadors of Spain to be ridden. In colonial America though they used to horse both to ride and as draft animals.
The spanish introduced horses to north America
The Spanish introduced horses to North America.
Horses are still here. They were imported from Spain (with the conquistadors) and some escaped and migrated north to become wild North American horses, which are still around.
There were ancient horses native to the Americas, but they went extinct prior to human civilizations being founded. The current mustang population of the American West, the Chincoteague Ponies and other feral horse populations are all descendants of horses and ponies brought over by the European explorers, settlers and conquistadors.
"Aboriginal Americans," which were not technically native from North America, did not use domestic horses until the idea was introduced by European explorers.
The Spanish re-introduced horses to North, Central and South America, where the prehistoric horse population had become extinct many thousands of years earlier.
The Horse. Before the arrival of European colonists, there were no horses in the Americas.