What is an animal?
The animal is the living thing that feeds on organic matter and the walls of its cells are usually solid and most animals can move and have nervous devices.
The animal can not make its own food. It feeds on the material obtained from other plants or animals.
In other ways, animals are like plants. They grow, reproduce, breathe, and dispose of waste. Animals must be able to move.
And animals that exercise complex movements have neurotransmitters to control their bodies.
For example, a single-cell organism (ogolina) has a mullet (or granular granule) that is sometimes classified as a plant but can also be fed in an animal-like manner. Some biologists therefore classify the ocularina as an animal.
Who is the author of animal legends?
Legends of traditional Greek animals are short stories where wisdom, lesson, and advice are intended.
Written by a freemason named Isob who lived in the fifth century BC.
Many scientists believe that Isob was not a real person. It was the custom of ancient Greek people to call the animal mythologist (AESOP). The stories may have been traditional and spoken. The story has become part of that tradition and may be incorrect.
The same stories are still common.
The narratives that we know today are based on a clear foundation, which is the work of a Roman writer named Vaidus. He was a free worshiper who lived before the time of Jesus Christ. These stories were collected and written long before the 4th century BC.
Who is the first to feed animals?
The Neolithic peoples were the first to introduce the first of the rangelands and animals and began to grow crops and this took the great step towards the civilization between the year (8000 and 5000) (BC) and what is now known as the Near East at the eastern tip of the Mediterranean.
The early farmers themselves and their descendants freed themselves from the total reliance on hunting animals, fish and all wild animals and fruits for their food, and put their animals in special sheds to protect them and provide them with food as they kept young animals and they included new herds
Thus the Neolithic people began to form stable societies for the farmer who wanted to devote time to his land and harvest crops.
The first plants planted by humans were wheat and barley, as they were good food was easy in agriculture and harvesting, and the legs and remnants of their residues feed animals.
The first animals to be domesticated were goats, pigs, sheep, cattle and dogs.
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