We all know how much the Ancient Egyptians loved their cats; it’s somehow comforting to know that even 5000 years ago people were making and sharing cat pics with each other. But were those cats the same as the felines that we share our lives with today?
Pet Foolery , creators of our favorite animal duo Pixie and Brutus, have just released a new comic that humorously analyse this, speculating how cats have changed over the ages. Were they as calm and lap-friendly? Were they happy to sit by the door and watch the world go by? Perhaps it was the ancient Egyptians who really domesticated cats because these prehistoric pussies seem a little on the wild side!
Scroll down below to check out the latest Pet Foolery for yourself, and let us know what you think in the comments!
According to Smithsonian.com , it has taken some time to piece together the riddle of cats and their domestication; they have come to a tentative conclusion that we have lived side-by-side with them for around 12,000 years. “Some clues first came from the island of Cyprus in 1983, when archaeologists found a cat’s jawbone dating back 8,000 years, they write. “Since it seemed highly unlikely that humans would have brought wild cats over to the island( a spew, scratching, panic-stricken wild feline would have been the last kind of barge companion they would have wanted ), the finding suggested that domestication resulted before 8,000 years ago.”
“In 2004, the unearthing of an even older site at Cyprus, in which a cat had been purposely interred with a human, induced it even more certain that the island’s ancient cats were domesticated and pushed the domestication date back at least another 1,500 years.”
More recently, a study published in the research journal Science secured more pieces in the cat-domestication puzzle based on genetic analyses. “All domestic cats, ” the authors proclaimed, “descended from a Middle Eastern wildcat, Felis sylvestris , which literally entails “cat of the woods.” Cats were first domesticated in the Near East, and some of the study writers speculate that the process began up to 12,000 years ago.”
So there you have it. We have lived together with our feline friends for millennia, yet they still act like they scarcely know us half of the time!