enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Horse teeth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_teeth

    Horse teeth often wear in specific patterns, based on the way the horse eats its food, and these patterns are often used to conjecture on the age of the horse after it has developed a full mouth. As with aging through observing tooth eruption, this can be imprecise, and may be affected by diet, natural abnormalities, and vices such as cribbing .

  3. Equine dentistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_dentistry

    Equine dental technicians (also known colloquially as equine dentists, although this is not reflective of their official title) are veterinary paraprofessionals who specialize in routine dental work on horses, especially procedures such as rasping the sharp edges of teeth, also known as 'floating'. Scope of practice may be dictated by statute.

  4. Mammal tooth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammal_tooth

    Two horses of the same age may have different wear patterns. A horse's incisors, premolars, and molars, once fully developed, continue to erupt as the grinding surface is worn down through chewing. A young adult horse will have teeth which are 4.5-5 inches long, with the majority of the crown remaining below the gumline in the dental socket.

  5. Wolf tooth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_tooth

    Wolf teeth are small, peg-like horse teeth, which sit just in front of (or rostral to) the first cheek teeth of horses and other equids. They are vestigial first premolars , [ 1 ] and the first cheek tooth is referred to as the second premolar even when wolf teeth are not present.

  6. Glossary of equestrian terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_equestrian_terms

    The side of a horse. float 1. To rasp down sharp points that may form on horse teeth. Usually performed by a veterinarian or Equine dentistry specialist. [1]: 81 2. (Australasia) A horse trailer. flying change See lead change. foal A foal 1. A young horse of either sex under the age of one year.

  7. Equine malocclusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_malocclusion

    It results in prematurely worn out teeth, periodontal pocketing, decay, and tooth loss. It also prevents the horse from properly grinding its food as it makes side-to-side chewing difficult. A resolution for this problem is the reduction of the high complexes. This allows and encourages the horse to chew side-to-side. [2]

  8. Why humans have sharp front teeth - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/why-humans-sharp-front-teeth...

    Humans have sharp canine teeth, but we don't use them to tear meat. Like other apes, our ancestors used them to fight for mating rights.

  9. Evolution of the horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_the_horse

    Throughout the phylogenetic development, the teeth of the horse underwent significant changes. The type of the original omnivorous teeth with short, "bumpy" molars, with which the prime members of the evolutionary line distinguished themselves, gradually changed into the teeth common to herbivorous mammals. They became long (as much as 100 mm ...