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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Tue Mar 28, 2017, 12:47 PM Mar 2017

Humans 'Domesticated' Mice 15,000 Years Ago

By Jason Bittel

Most people are all too familiar with house mice. We know them as the eaters of crumbs, gnawers of cords, and leavers of droppings. They create the pitter-patters we hear in the night and the messes we find in the morning.

Conventional wisdom has said that mice and people began living together when humans learned to farm. But new research published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggests that our relationship with these rodents may be even more ancient.

By studying the fluctuations of house mouse fossils found in archaeological sites in the eastern Mediterranean, scientists have revealed that Mus musculus domesticus first cozied up to humans around 15,000 years ago.

That would be about 3,000 years before the advent of agriculture.

more
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/03/house-mouse-domesticated-humans-animals-science/

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Humans 'Domesticated' Mice 15,000 Years Ago (Original Post) n2doc Mar 2017 OP
And cats domesticated humans not long after, I'll bet. nt eppur_se_muova Mar 2017 #1
Mice surely would be attracted to any source of food. They like meat too. Yo_Mama Mar 2017 #2

Yo_Mama

(8,303 posts)
2. Mice surely would be attracted to any source of food. They like meat too.
Tue Mar 28, 2017, 07:34 PM
Mar 2017

It's hard to imagine any consistent food source, like a garbage heap, that wouldn't be exploited by rodents.

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