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  2. Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_and_Free-Roaming...

    This ruling forced the two slaughterhouses in Texas to close. In September 2007, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld a similar ban in Illinois, causing the plant located in that state to close. [a] However, BLM procedures do not ban the export of wild horses for sale and slaughter outside the United States. [73]

  3. Texas–Indian wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas–Indian_wars

    The Texas–Indian wars were a series of conflicts between settlers in Texas and the Southern Plains Indians during the 19th-century. Conflict between the Plains Indians and the Spanish began before other European and Anglo-American settlers were encouraged—first by Spain and then by the newly Independent Mexican government—to colonize Texas in order to provide a protective-settlement ...

  4. Horse Protection Act of 1970 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_Protection_Act_of_1970

    The Horse Protection Act of 1970 (HPA); (codified 15 U.S.C. §§ 1821 – 1831 [a]) is a United States federal law, under which the practice of soring is a crime punishable by both civil and criminal penalties, including fines and jail time. It is illegal to show a horse, enter it at a horse show, or to auction, sell, offer for sale, or ...

  5. Horse slaughter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_slaughter

    Horse slaughter is the practice of slaughtering horses to produce meat for consumption. Humans have long consumed horse meat; the oldest known cave art, the 30,000-year-old paintings in France's Chauvet Cave, depict horses with other wild animals hunted by humans. [1] Equine domestication is believed to have begun to raise horses for human ...

  6. As Texas cities consider bans on horse carriages, activists ...

    www.aol.com/news/texas-cities-consider-bans...

    Dallas is among a growing number of cities that may outlaw horse-drawn carriage rides. But animal activists might have a harder time pursuing such a ban in Fort Worth.

  7. Nueces Strip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nueces_Strip

    The Nueces Strip or Wild Horse Desert is the area of South Texas between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande. [1]According to the narrative of Spanish missionary Juan Agustín Morfi, there were so many wild horses swarming in the Nueces Strip in 1777 "that their trails make the country, utterly uninhabited by people, look as if it were the most populated in the world".

  8. Second Battle of Adobe Walls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Battle_of_Adobe_Walls

    The Second Battle of Adobe Walls was fought on June 27, 1874, between Comanche forces and a group of 28 Texan bison hunters defending the settlement of Adobe Walls, in what is now Hutchinson County, Texas. "Adobe Walls was scarcely more than a lone island in the vast sea of the Great Plains, a solitary refuge uncharted and practically unknown."

  9. Bison hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bison_hunting

    The Crow Indian Buffalo Hunt diorama at the Milwaukee Public Museum. A group of images by Eadweard Muybridge, set to motion to illustrate the animal's movement. Bison hunting (hunting of the American bison, also commonly known as the American buffalo) was an activity fundamental to the economy and society of the Plains Indians peoples who inhabited the vast grasslands on the Interior Plains of ...