When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Each-uisge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Each-uisge

    The each-uisge (Scottish Gaelic: [ɛxˈɯʃkʲə], literally "water horse") is a water spirit in Irish and Scottish folklore, spelled as the each-uisce (anglicized as aughisky or ech-ushkya) in Ireland and cabbyl-ushtey on the Isle of Man. It usually takes the form of a horse, and is similar to the kelpie but far more vicious.

  3. List of horses in mythology and folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_horses_in...

    Enbarr, Manannán, Niamh, and Lugh's horse, which could travel both land and sea; Kelpie, a mythical Celtic water horse; Liath Macha and Dub Sainglend, or Macha's Grey, Cú Chulainn's chariot horse; known as the king of all horses; The Tangle-Coated Horse/Earthshaker, an Otherworld horse belonging to Fionn mac Cumhaill

  4. Hagerman horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagerman_horse

    The waterhole could have been where the bones of the Hagerman horses accumulated as injured, old, and ill animals, drawn to water, died there. [4] A study by H. Gregory McDonald in 1996 alternatively suggested based on the age distribution of remains at the quarry, which span from newborns to adults, that a herd died in a single catastrophic ...

  5. Nuckelavee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuckelavee

    Orcadian folklore had a strong Scandinavian influence, and it may be that the nuckelavee is a composite of a water horse from Celtic mythology and a creature imported by the Norsemen. As with similar malevolent entities such as the kelpie, it possibly offered an explanation for incidents that islanders in ancient times could not otherwise ...

  6. List of plants poisonous to equines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_poisonous...

    Plants can cause reactions ranging from laminitis (found in horses bedded on shavings from black walnut trees), anemia, kidney disease and kidney failure (from eating the wilted leaves of red maples), to cyanide poisoning (from the ingestion of plant matter from members of the genus Prunus) and other symptoms.

  7. Gashadokuro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gashadokuro

    The Gashadokuro is a spirit that takes the form of a giant skeleton made of the skulls of people who died in the battlefield or of starvation/famine (while the corpse becomes a gashadokuro, the spirit becomes a separate yōkai, known as hidarugami.), and is 10 or more meters tall.

  8. Przewalski's horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Przewalski's_horse

    Przewalski's horse (/(p) ʃ ə ˈ v ɑː l s k iː z, ˌ p ɜːr ʒ ə-/ (p)shə-VAHL-skeez, PUR-zhə-; [3] Russian: [prʐɨˈvalʲskʲɪj] (Пржевальский); Polish: [pʂɛˈvalskʲi]; Equus ferus przewalskii or Equus przewalskii [4]), also called the takhi (Mongolian: Тахь), [5] Mongolian wild horse or Dzungarian horse, is a rare and endangered horse originally native to the ...

  9. Horse skulls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_skulls

    As part of the larger folk tradition of concealing objects in structures, horse skulls are related to concealed shoes, dried cats, and witch bottles. There are two main theories as to the reason for depositing the horse skulls in buildings: as a method for enhancing the acoustics of a room, such as in a church or in a threshing barn; or as a ...