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  2. Hebridean sheep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebridean_sheep

    A group of three Hebridean sheep rams from the Weatherwax Flock. The sheep kept throughout Britain up to the Iron Age were small, short-tailed, and varied in colour. These survived into the 19th century in the Highlands and Islands as the Scottish Dunface, which had various local varieties, most of which are now extinct (some do survive, such as the Shetland and North Ronaldsay).

  3. Polycerate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polycerate

    Polycerate sheep breeds include the Hebridean, Icelandic, [2] Jacob, [3] Manx Loaghtan, Boreray and the Navajo-Churro. One example of a polycerate Shetland sheep was a ram kept by US President Thomas Jefferson for several years in the early 19th century in front of the White House.

  4. Boreray sheep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreray_sheep

    St Kilda is a remote archipelago, west of the Outer Hebrides.Several types of sheep have been associated with St Kilda. In addition to the Boreray, these include the Soay sheep, a feral type from Soay (one of the other islands in the St Kilda archipelago), and the Hebridean sheep, which was formerly called the "St Kilda sheep", although the sheep it was derived from were probably not in fact ...

  5. Flora and fauna of the Outer Hebrides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flora_and_fauna_of_the...

    The St Kildans kept up to 2,000 sheep, which were removed at the time of the evacuation, but a herd of 107 indigenous Soay sheep were transferred onto Hirta from Soay and now live in a feral state. Soay sheep are a very primitive breed that do not require shearing. Numbers vary from 600 to 1,700 on Hirta, and 200 remain on Soay.

  6. Scottish Dunface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Dunface

    Multi-horned Dunface sheep elsewhere in the Hebrides survived longest on the island of North Uist, and these were probably the basis of the breed which became known as the "St Kilda" sheep, now generally called the Hebridean sheep. By the early 20th century this was extinct in the Hebrides, but it survived in parks in England and mainland Scotland.

  7. Manx Loaghtan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manx_Loaghtan

    The Manx Loaghtan is a small sheep, with no wool on their dark brown faces and legs. The sheep have short tails and are fine-boned. In the past century the sheep's colour has stabilised as "moorit", that is shades between fawn and dark reddish brown, though the colour bleaches in the sun. [6]

  8. Northern European short-tailed sheep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_European_short...

    Descended from earlier short-tailed Hebridean sheep, crossed with Scottish Blackface. the Castlemilk Moorit – From the Castlemilk estate in Dumfriesshire in Scotland. Horned in both sexes, moorit (reddish brown). Bred as ornamental parkland animals from Manx Loaghtan, Shetland and wild Mouflon.

  9. Jacob sheep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_sheep

    The horns in two-horned sheep, and the lower horns in four-horned animals, grow in a spiral shape. The rostral set of horns usually extend upwards and outwards, while the caudal set of horns curls downwards along the side of the head and neck. On polycerate animals it is preferred that there is a fleshy gap between the two pairs of horns.