1. TRANSPORTATION AROUND
THE WORLD
Cielo Berenice Luna Bravo
Silvia Angelica Enríquez
Bonilla
María Joselinne Martínez
Robles
Inglés 4
Viernes 1:00 a 5:00 pm
2. Draft animals have been in use for almost a
millennium, after the Neolithic revolution that allowed
livestock farming, especially when they made wheel
technology possible in the Metal Age.
The main draft animals are Equidae (horse, donkeys
and mules), bovines (oxen).
The dogs (hunting, grazing, etc.) in addition to being
draft and companion animals.
The camelids are often used as pack animals, those of
the old world (camels and dromedaries) and those of
the new world (llamas, alpacas).
While reindeers are often used as a sled shot.
4. Camel pulling a tourist car in Agra (india)
Yak used as a draft animal in Shuinj,
Pakistan
Reindeer pulling a sledge in Norway
5. Onagros (wild donkey): Used in
ancient times to pull carts in present- day
Iran and Irak, where it occasionally
hybridized with horses; their
domestication fell into disuse in favor of
African donkeys
6. Dogs: used almost exclusively in icy areas,
on roller skates forming a set called sled.
7. Yaks: They fulfill the same as the
American flames but in Tibet and cold and
high mountains of Asias such as the
Himalayas, Domesticated yaks are used to
transport loads. Their skins and their wool
are also used.
Llamas: these auquénidos or American
camelids have been used as pack animals
for centuries, during the Inca Empire they
were the chargers par excellence
8. Moose: for both food and
saddle and draft animal
purposes. Its domestication was
located in the inhabited areas of
the Russian taiga
9. Ostriches: This animal has been
used sporadically in South Africa as a
means of transport riding bareback,
using a very basic head
10. Llamas: these auquénidos or American
camelids have been used as pack animals
for centuries, during the Inca Empire they
were the chargers par excellence