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  2. Bullock cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullock_cart

    The oldest wooden wheels usable for transport were found in southern Russia and dated to 3325 ± 125 BC. [1] Evidence of wheeled vehicles appears from the mid-4th millennium BC, between the North Sea and Mesopotamia [citation needed]. The earliest vehicles may have been ox carts. [2] Indian people with their bullock carts c. the early 1900s.

  3. Costa Rican oxcarts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costa_Rican_oxcarts

    Eventually, contests were held to award the “most creative and inspiring ox cart designs.” Many of these are still a part of tradition today. Many oxcarts were even designed to make its own ‘song’, a unique chime created when a metal ring strikes the hub nut of the wheel while going down the road. [1] [5] [6]

  4. Red River cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_River_cart

    Red River ox cart (1851), by Frank Blackwell Mayer. The Red River cart is a large two-wheeled cart made entirely of non-metallic materials. Often drawn by oxen, though also by horses or mules, these carts were used throughout most of the 19th century in the fur trade and in westward expansion in Canada and the United States, in the area of the Red River and on the plains west of the Red River ...

  5. Wanyūdō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wanyūdō

    Wanyūdō takes the form of a burning ox cart wheel bearing the tormented face of a man. Various folklore purports him as the condemned soul of a tyrannical daimyō who, in life, was known for having his victims drawn on the back of an ox cart.

  6. Ox-wagon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ox-wagon

    An ox-wagon or bullock wagon is a four-wheeled vehicle pulled by oxen (draught cattle). It was a traditional form of transport , especially in Southern Africa but also in New Zealand and Australia .

  7. The Oxen and the Creaking Cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Oxen_and_the_Creaking_Cart

    A traditional Mexican ox-cart. The Oxen and the Creaking Cart is a situational fable ascribed to Aesop and is numbered 45 in the Perry Index. [1] Originally directed against complainers, it was later linked with the proverb 'the worst wheel always creaks most' [2] and aimed emblematically at babblers of all sorts.