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  2. Equine coat color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color

    The word "points" is given to the mane, tail, lower legs, and ear rims with respect to horse coloration. The overall name given to a horse coat color depends on the color of both the points and the body. For example, bay horses have a reddish-brown body with black points. [3] Point coloration is most often produced by the action of the agouti gene.

  3. Chestnut (horse color) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chestnut_(horse_color)

    Brown, which may be difficult to distinguish visually from dark bay, is always accompanied by black points. Liver chestnuts, in particular, are mistakenly called brown or "seal brown". Silver bay horses typically have chocolate- to red-brown bodies with silvered mane, tail, and legs. The flat reddish-brown color and lack of easily identified ...

  4. List of horse breeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_horse_breeds

    Colonial Spanish horse, descendants of the original Jennet-type horse brought to North America, now with a number of modern breed names. Draft horse or draught horse; Feral horse, a horse living in the wild, but descended from once-domesticated ancestors. Most "wild" horses today are actually feral.

  5. Bay (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_(horse)

    Bay horses range in color from a light copper red, to a rich red blood bay (the best-known variety of bay horse) to a very dark red or brown called dark bay, mahogany bay, black-bay, or brown (or "seal brown"). The dark brown shades of bay are referred to in other languages by words meaning "black-and-tan."

  6. Seal brown (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seal_brown_(horse)

    Both Dark Bay horses, which have a black mane, tail, and legs with a dark reddish brown or sooty coat, and seal brown horses, which have very dark brown coats in addition to black "points", with reddish or tan hairs around their muzzle, eyes, elbows, and flanks have one of two genotypes at the Agouti locus: A/A or A/a. [27]

  7. Goodnight Olive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodnight_Olive

    Goodnight Olive is a dark bay or brown mare who was bred in Kentucky by Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings and Clearsky Farms and was a $170,000 purchase at the 2019 October Keeneland sale by Steve Laymon's First Row Partners. [3] Goodnight Olive is by 2004 Horse of the Year Ghostzapper.

  8. Horse markings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_markings

    "Glass" eye, "Moon" eye, "China" eye, "Wall" eye or "Night" eye: A blue eye. Horses with blue eyes are less common than horses with brown eyes, but can see equally well. An eye can also be partially blue. Chestnuts: A callous-like area on the inside of the horse's leg that has a subtle pattern, but one unique to each horse. It has been proposed ...

  9. List of historical horses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical_horses

    Dilbagh and Gulbagh, horses of the Sikh guru, Guru Hargobind; Figure (also known by the name of one of his owners, Justin Morgan), the foundation sire of the Morgan horse breed; Gunrock, used in the 1920s at UC Davis to breed horses for the U.S. Army Cavalry; Hollywood Dun It, all-time leading reining sire and Quarter Horse