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http://www.aristotle.net/~swarmack/aurohist.html
If you can read French, one of the better ones is:
http://www.gramat-parc-animalier.com/fiches/domestique/aurochs.htm
I am glad that you pointed me to the everything2 site, especially that my best search engine sofar http://www.webtop.com just went down the drain. user:H.J.
Small clarification here, and an apology for yelling. When I revised the Auroch entry, I revised it after reading that the last Aurochs was killed in Masovia. Didn't even notice that the original entry had the wrong place altogether. It didn't occur to me at the time that the usual "it was in Prussia" discussion had been sidetracked by the misinformation that this happened in an entirely different province -- one that is in Prussia -- than the one I was talking about, which is in Poland. Apologies to Sensible Wikipedians like Paul Drye for jumping at shadows...JHK
Ancient cave dwellings show rock paintings and carvings of magical strength connected with the aurochs.
I happen to agree with this. However, I can't figure out how we "paint or carve magical strength". We need to rephrase this and put it back. Thanks.
In these and many other early art-works, the aurochs are attributed with possessing magical qualities.
How the heck are we supposed to infer this from cave paintings? Maybe the artists meant to attribute the aurochs with being very organized, or attractively shaped, or well worth the effort of barbecuing.
They are certainly not worth barbecuing: they have been in the freezer far too long. Frankly, my take is this: they are painted ergo they are worthy of representation. If they are merely attributed (etc), this covers most of the bases since we don't need to get into long and tedious discussions about the role of the palaeolithic hunter/magician nor the converse view that the paintings were nothing to do with magic whatsoever but were in fact the palaeolithic equivalent of car mags, depicting things that men like looking at in their spare time. sjc
Alan -- All of the websites I checked pretty uniformly said the Aurochs looked like the Lascaux cave paintings. The modern re-creation also looks like that. I think the picture from the 1911 source might be wrong -- it looks more like pictures of the Wisent to me. Would it be ok to remove it? JHK
That picture looks more like a bison than the beasties that are in the cave paintings and in the Minoan bull-vaulting paintings -- are you sure it's an aurochs? -- Marj Tiefert 13:35 Jul 31, 2002 (PDT)
As both the aurochs and the wisent were being hunted to extinction and becoming rarer during the medieval period in Europe, people confused them. The aurochs "Illustration by Sigismund von Herberstein" (which I think is a woodcut) has the caption saying to call the animal by the correct name. Apparently that confusion persisted into the 20th century. Wastrel Way (talk)Eric
Dear all, I appreciate your interest in aurochs, because for many years I studied this bovine species; its history, morphology and ecology were all part of my study. That is why I can inform you that aurochs and European bison are two different bovine species. The first one is extinct, the other is still alive. The last aurochs lived in the Forest of Jaktorów, a royal forest near Warsaw, in the Province of Masovia (Poland). Masuria, in the Northeast of Poland, formerly was Prussian area, afterwards conquered by the Germans and nowadays Polish. If you have any further questions, don't hesitate about asking me. --Cheers, Cis — Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.93.220.11 (talk) 19:17, 2005 May 16 (UTC)
Hi Paul, The site I gave is partly in Dutch and partly in English. I have changed the introduction path. The (partial) English text is the following:
'This site provides information about the research into the history, morphology and ecology of the aurochs (Bos primigenius) by Cis van Vuure. After a many years’ research, the writing started in April 1998 and ended in April 2000. Eventually in 2003, we managed to publish this research in the form of a nice, illustrated (Dutch) book. Finally we found Pensoft Publishers willing to publish the English version, entitled ‘Retracing the aurochs – history, morphology and ecology of an extinct wild ox’. Halfway this year the book will be available. If you are interested in it and want to be put on the mailing list, please send me an email'.
This is not a commercial book, at least not for me: I spent so much money and effort that I shall never be compensated completely for it. This book tells the comprehensive story about all aspects of the aurochs and its relatives, and also of Heck cattle, the so-called bred-back aurochs. This was the only way to research and unmask all those mysteries around the aurochs.
--Best wishes, Cis — Preceding unsigned comment added by Cis enwiki (talk • contribs) 14:00, 2005 May 18 (UTC)
In this article I see that aurochs is Bos primigenius, but I have seen elsewhere that the aurochs has the scientific name Bos taurus primigenius.
Are both Bos primigenius and Bos taurus primigenius correct scientific names for the aurochs? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Gyrkin (talk • contribs) 21:22, 2017 June 8 (UTC)
According to: Boev, Z., 2021. Last Aurochs (Bos primigenius Bojanus, 1827) have survived in Bulgaria. — Lynx (Prague), 52: 139—142, the information that the aurox was extinct by 1627 might be incorrect. 31.182.220.91 (talk) 21:46, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
BhagyaMani, I'm sorry, but I'm not sure why you reverted this edit. The article text mentions "habitat loss caused by expanding pastoralism" and "Excessive hunting began and continued until the aurochs was nearly extinct. The gradual extinction of the aurochs in Central Europe was concurrent with the clearcutting of large forest tracts...", so I guess we could add "Species endangered by logging", as well. Thoughts? HLHJ (talk) 22:59, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
These subcategories are used for all Biota by conservation status, from Least concern species to Extinct species
- the reasons why an extinct species went extinct are of historic interest
- the reasons why currently de-listed species were previously threatened are also of interest
- it isn't always clear whether a species is extinct or not.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08112-6 , the most comprehensive geneticstudy to date. Probably worth working in Hemiauchenia (talk) 00:36, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
The abstract uses the term "archaic human" for Neanderthals, itself controversial, but the main text actually is not even certain whether Neanderthals or other archaic hominins were involved. It is thus safer and more consistent to replace both mentions of "archaic humans" with the more general term "archaic hominins". 86.138.165.111 (talk) 17:36, 10 February 2025 (UTC)