First Dog Lived 31,700 Years

A scientific discovery that the first dog lived 31,700 years ago.

A scientific discovery by a team of scientists states that the first dog lived about 31,700 years ago. Its breed was is a toothy K-Nine. Its diet consisted of horse, musk ox, and reindeer, a new study has been revealed.

If this discovery is completely true, along with its details, then this will push back the date when dogs first exsisted by about 17,700 years, which was the second oldest dog found in Russia, dated to have been living 14,00 years ago. As new details form on this story every week, the dog was found in Belguim at Goyet Cave. The first people to ever domestically charish dogs were the Aurignacian people of Europe of the Patheolithic Period. If Patheolithic dogs, or the breed of Patheolithic dogs still existed on Earth today, these dogs would be used instead of K-Nines, as because these dogs had much better strength and Agility then K-Nines.

The Patheolithic dogs would be stronger than the K-Nines because they have a diverse DNA gene, that is two different kinds of genes: Dog genes, which is where the Patheolithic dogs get their strength, and wolf-like genes, which present a better version of agility then the K-Nines type of agility. Those would help us much better than these K-Nines, but would be harder to control, as they have wolf genes in their DNA, which would give them a wild side. They would have been good dogs to have anyway.

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One Response to “First Dog Lived 31,700 Years”

  1. Joshua Miguel Says...

    On September 26, 2009 at 9:23 pm

    very interesting post. tnx for the share


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