zero have been domesticated.. none :)
Oh, dude, like, farming arrived in Britain around 4000 BC during the Neolithic period. People were like, "Hey, let's grow some crops and raise some animals," and that's how farming came to be. So, yeah, around 6000 years ago, give or take a few centuries.
The Stone Age actually lasted for a much longer period, beginning around 2.5 million years ago and ending around 4,000 years ago with the advent of metalworking. It was characterized by the widespread use of stone tools and marked a significant period of human technological development and evolution.
The Mesolithic era is generally considered to have ended around 6000 BCE, with the beginning of the Neolithic era. This transition was marked by advancements in agriculture and the domestication of plants and animals.
Asbestos has been used for thousands of years, with evidence of its use dating back to ancient civilizations like the Greeks and Romans. However, it was Finnish geologist Johan Gottlieb Gahn who is credited with discovering the mineral in its modern form in the late 18th century.
The Stone Age is also known as prehistory and it ranges between 200.000 and 4000 years BCE when the dawn of civilization commenced. This period is divided to three subcategories the Paleolithic, the Mesolithic and the Neolithic one which ended with the dawn of the Bronze age.
Yes, over the last 4000 years, many animals have been domesticated including dogs, cats, horses, cows, pigs, and chickens. These domesticated animals have been bred and raised by humans for various purposes such as companionship, work, food, and clothing.
potato
Peonies have been cultivated for over 4000 years in China.
4,000 years ago the Egyptians domesticated dinosaurs. hell yeah!
Fossils exist of several ancestral species, and cave drawings from around 30,000 BC show horses (although they were likely hunted for food). During the period 4500 BC to 2000 BC, there are records of increasing domestication by human societies.
Alpacas were probably first domesticated around 4000-5000 B.C.
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I don't know what damesticate means, but the Egyptians domesticated cats about 4,000 years ago.
There were no animals 65 million years ago. God did not create the world until between 4000 and 6000 B.C.
In a sense, all domesticated animals and plants and even some bacteria and yeasts are "man made" by selective breeding for certain characteristics that never existed in nature. Docility for example, gets wiped out in the wild very quickly. The cat seems to have been "invented" by the Egyptians about 4000 years ago. The gives a clue why cats are so different from dogs, which were domesticated at least 20,000 years earlier.
Australia is home to over 300 species of mammals, 800 species of birds, 4000 species of fish, and countless species of reptiles, amphibians, and insects, making it one of the most biodiverse countries in the world. The exact number of individual animals is difficult to estimate.
hedge hog, antspine eater, duckbilled playtipus, whales, dolphins and 4000 species of animals that have ears but lay eggs. go and research