-
Random Facts
- What is dew and how is it formed?
- How do surface waves cause earthquake damage?
- Where Was the Tomato Once Considered Poisonous?
- Do Bananas Grow on Trees?
- How Did Vitamins Get Their Names?
- Which Insect Sips Its Dinner Through a Straw?
- Who Were the Amazons?
- What’s the name of the star that is closest to our sun?
- How Many Stars Can You See in the Sky?
- What Were the First Methods of Measurement?
-
Recent Comments
- Tim tool man on Where is the Hottest Place on Earth?
- Bob Cahill on Are areas near the equator always warm even at higher elevations?
- chris on Who Invented Chewing Gum?
- mary on History of Umbrellas
- Abel Robinault on How Does a Clam Eat?
- chakaloso on How Does a Radio Work?
- natalie amaya on History of Shoes
- genessia on Who Invented the First Computer?
- Pop on Which Country Makes The Most Movies?
- Deedee on Why Did the Indians Sell Manhattan Island for Only $24?
Tags
-
Pages

Is a Tamed Animal the Same as a Domesticated One?
All tamed animals are not domesticated animals; it takes many centuries after an animal that has been taken from its wild state and tamed before it changes completely into a domesticated animal, one that has been tamed by man and raised to provide him with food, clothing, transportation, or friendship.
Once an animal is domesticated, its offspring behave like domesticated animals without having to be tamed themselves. For example, lions and bears can be tamed, but their offspring would behave like wild animals if they did not have the same upbringing by humans as their parents did. However, dogs, cows, and sheep are born already tame and domesticated.
The dog was the first animal to be domesticated, probably before recorded history began. Cattle, sheep, goats, and pigs soon followed. But the horse, chicken, and cat were domesticated much later, about 3000 B.C.