Kay Frydenborg
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A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
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Chocolate: Sweet Science & Dark Secrets of the World's Favorite Treat
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published
2015
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4 editions
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Wild Horse Scientists (Scientists in the Field Series)
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published
2012
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3 editions
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They Dreamed of Horses: Careers for Horse Lovers
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published
1994
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3 editions
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Animal Therapist
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published
2005
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2 editions
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Weird Careers in Science Set
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published
2005
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Forging a Life: a farrier's ancient dance with iron
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published
2012
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Wild Horse Scientists (Scientists in the Field Series) by Kay Frydenborg(2000-06-01)
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The Wild Horse
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“Of all the animal species alive in the world now or in the past, only a relatively few have been domesticated by humans, most of them in just the last few thousand years of human history. The dog was the first, by a wide margin—the only animal believed to have been domesticated by itinerant human hunter-gatherers, long before the development of farming and permanent settlements.”
― A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
― A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
“And the olfactory part of a dog’s brain is forty times larger than a human’s; depending on the breed, a dog can have up to 300 million olfactory receptors in his nose, compared to about 6 million in ours. Even with that extreme superiority in equipment, dogs don’t merely smell a superstrong version of what we smell (or don’t smell); instead, they can perceive multiple layers of smell, which gives dogs a far greater range of information.”
― A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
― A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
“The more we learn about dogs, the more it appears that our species’ relationship with them may have begun as one of cooperation, rather than one of dominance and submission—a true partnership going all the way back to the earliest meetings of humans and certain rather unusual wolves.”
― A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
― A Dog in the Cave: The Wolves Who Made Us Human
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