When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gray horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_Horse

    A gray horse (or grey horse) has a coat color characterized by progressive depigmentation of the colored hairs of the coat. Most gray horses have black skin and dark eyes; unlike some equine dilution genes and some other genes that lead to depigmentation, gray does not affect skin or eye color. [1]

  3. Equine coat color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color

    Steel Grey/Iron Grey: A grey horse with intermingled black and white hairs. This color occurs in a horse born black, or in some cases, dark bay, and slowly lightens as the horse ages. Rose Grey: A grey horse with a reddish or pinkish tinge to its coat. This color occurs in a horse born bay or chestnut and slowly lightens as the horse ages ...

  4. Equine coat color genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color_genetics

    Horses with a gray gene can be born any color and their hair coat will lighten and change with age. Most wild equids are dun, as were many horses and asses before domestication of the horse . Some were non-dun with primitive markings , and non-dun 1 is one of the oldest coat color mutations, and has been found in remains from 42,700 years ago ...

  5. Lipizzan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipizzan

    A white horse is born white and has unpigmented skin. [5] Until the eighteenth century, Lipizzans had other coat colors, including dun, bay, chestnut, black, piebald, and skewbald. [2] However, gray is a dominant gene. [5] Gray was the color preferred by the royal family, so the color was emphasized in breeding practices.

  6. White horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_horse

    Gray horses may be born of any color and their hairs gradually turn white as time goes by and take on a white appearance. Nearly all gray horses have dark skin, except under any white markings present at birth. Skin color is the most common method for an observer to distinguish between mature white and gray horses. [1]

  7. Percheron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percheron

    The Percheron is a breed of draft horse that originated in the Huisne river valley in western France, part of the former Perche province, from which the breed takes its name. . Usually gray or black in color, Percherons are well-muscled, and known for their intelligence and willingness to wo

  8. Alcock's Arabian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcock's_Arabian

    Alcock's Arabian (foaled about 1700, died about 1733), also known as Pelham Grey Arabian and less certainly as Bloody Buttocks and Ancaster Turk, among other names, is the ancestor of all grey-coloured Thoroughbred horses, [1] as well as grey sport and riding horses descended from Thoroughbred lines.

  9. Horse markings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_markings

    Bay: A horse coat color that features black point coloration on a red base coat. All bay horses have a black mane, tail and legs (except where overlain by white markings), caused by the presence of the agouti gene. Most have black hairs along the edges of their ears and on their muzzles, and occasionally will have a slight darkening of the ...