Thursday, March 21, 2019

8 Amazing Facts About Dogs

Dogs are the favorite pets around the world. It is estimated that there are more than 525 million dogs on the ground today. Here are some facts about our beloved friends.

14,000 years
Historians differ about when and where # people began to domesticate dogs for the first time. The first dogs are believed to be # wolves who have reestablished themselves and were first attracted to the first sites of human settlement areas.

The remains of people who were buried with their dogs were also discovered in Germany. Estimates are estimated to be at least 14,000 years. Early dog ​​remains were found in China between 5800 and 7000 BC, so there is a site for the burial of dogs in Utah where it is estimated to date back to 11,000 years.

The first identifiable dog species date back to about 9000 BC. It may have been the type of Greyhound used in hunting.





+ Dog breeds
When he dies a dog in ancient Egypt, the owners, if they can, do not hesitate to work on the same mummifying care enjoyed by a human family. And his friends were shaving their eyebrows, a sign of extreme sadness.

In ancient China, it was believed that dogs were gods, and their blood was so sacred that they were used to seal faith and loyalty.

In the Americas, Mayan tribes kept dogs as pets, but they were also associated with gods. It was said that the dogs were leading the souls of the dead through a watershed called Zebalba. When the spirit reached this underworld, the dog helped instruct the deceased to cross the challenges posed by the poles of Zepalba in order to reach the Commission.



+ Age of the dog from the face
Dog breeds with sharp pointed faces usually live longer than flat-faced dogs, such as baldogs and Asian dogs.

The type of education that is used to make a dog's face flat can lead to many health problems, including skin, eye and breathing problems, as well as poor heat tolerance. The longer the dog's nose, the more effective it is in the internal cooling.



+ Poisonous foods
Dogs should be protected from eating some human foods even if they are small amounts, such as grapes and raisins, because they contain an unknown substance that causes renal failure of dogs. Macadamia nuts can damage the nervous system of the dog. Onions and garlic may also damage red blood cells. As well as chocolate, avocado and alcohol, as well as anything with caffeine, as it can be fatal to the dog.

+ Power of smell
To put this judgment in perspective, a person can detect the smell of a teaspoon of sugar in a cup of coffee, while the dog can detect a teaspoon of sugar in two Olympic-sized swimming pools.

Some dogs were said to have smelt the bodies of the dead under water, and could have inhaled natural gas deposits 40 feet below the ground, so they could smell cancer in humans.

+ Read the minds
Dogs can read minds, not literally, but they record excellent signs of body language reading. For example, a study during which a therapeutic substance was hidden under one of two inverted buckets. Someone behind the buckets stood to give several body signals, like pointing to one of the buckets or leaning toward them.

When the experiment was conducted on chimpanzees, or 3-year-olds, they were almost unable to interpret body signals until they learned what they meant, while dogs could immediately understand and distinguish the intended bucket.

Why is this happening? Scientists say they have no explanation, but dogs are clearly adept at reading human body signals.

+ The intelligence of a child
Research at the University of British Columbia has revealed that dog intelligence can rival a human child from two to two and a half years. Even dogs can understand 150 to 200 words, even counting to 4 or 5, but deliberately deceive humans and other dogs to get pleasure and entertain them.

+ Touch is the first sense
When a puppy is born, the first thing the mother does is clean it. This process involves touching all nerve endings in the pup's body, helping to flow blood to all limbs.

From these beginnings, touch becomes part of the socialization of dogs, reinforcing the bonds between friends and family members, both dogs and humans.

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