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Correct weight : Comments
By Tom Quirk, published 15/12/2006Humans have improved their race times more than horses over the last 100 years. Why?
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Posted by Taswegian, Friday, 15 December 2006 9:32:48 AM
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Edie Sedgwick
Posted by Savage Pencil, Friday, 15 December 2006 11:20:11 AM
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Tom Quirk, the answer is simple.Humans have not used running as an evolutionary advantage to escape their enemies or catch their prey,where as horses have pushed the boundaries of their physical mechanics over millions of years for speed and thus have nearly reached their evolutionary potential.Humans on the other hand have relied on intelligence rather than speed to out wit their quarry,hence that have not found it necessary to push the boundaries of their physical potential.
Horses are presently more than twice as fast as our fastest olympians and it will take millions of years of evolution for us to catch up. Posted by Arjay, Friday, 15 December 2006 7:57:57 PM
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I am not sure tha answer is simple, as suggested by Arjay. Very little is simple. However I am reliably informed that in the sport of pacing race times have reduced substantially as horses are bred to use this unnatural gait. This would seem to support Arjay's suggestion that in galloping and trotting (both natural) at least horses have come very close to their evolutionary peak.
Posted by Reynard, Tuesday, 19 December 2006 11:04:50 AM
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Humans have the psychological factor. Some of us will remember when it seemed like no-one would run a mile in under 4 minutes. But after Roger Bannister proved that it could be done, all of a sudden it seemed as if if everyone was doing it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-minute_mile Similarly, Everest seemed unconquerable until Edmund Hillary and Sardar Tenzing Norgay successfully climbed it. Next thing we know, all sorts of people were up there. Horses, and other animals, just don't have the psychological advantage of "well, if he/she can do it, then I'm damned sure I can!". Posted by Rex, Tuesday, 19 December 2006 11:30:50 PM
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The success of unfashionably bred sprinters suggests random variation rather than bloodlines may be important. I note that the Danish royal family is outcrossing with some local stock.