Why did Dingos de-domesticate themselves from Abbos?
Why did Dingos de-domesticate themselves from Abbos?
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To eat babies
An innocent baby was eaten by wild dogs
It's never been funny
The mother was blamed for it because the story was so outlandish and unexpected for Dingos. She got locked away for a long time until someone stumbled upon the remains. Classic 'stralia.
Can you imagine being owned by an abo?
This, the dog-human compact was basically dogs are limited labor, camp guards, and can assist hunts with their senses of smell and hearing while humans provide the superior intellect. With Abos the humans were no longer fulfilling their part of the bargain.
> With Abos the humans were no longer fulfilling their part of the bargain.
lol
abos degenerated to cavemen tier so dogs broke the human-dog alliance and return to wildlife
Aboriginals never actually domesticated them, all the evidence is circumstantial and indicates that they were in a stage of pre-domestication like the hyper-social wolves that were eventually domesticated by Eurasians.
Dingos were a newer arrival than what is generally considered indigenous Australian
Probably landing on a Viking ship
Or, much more likely, from Indonesia/South East Asia
Some canines have an aversion to darker people. Its a real world phenomenon.
I thought dingos were dogs the Brits brought over that went feral
Damn, nope. just looked it up they are from some kind of wild dog in SEA.
No. Dingos are wild dogs. They're genetically closer to wolves than domesticated dogs.
There closest relative is the New Guinea Singing Dog, which is the only wild dog that habitual climbs trees in search of prey.
It's unlikely Dingos have ever been domesticated and they most likely arrived in Australia via a land bridge in the Torres Strait around 8 thousand years ago.
>a dingo did in fact eat this woman’s baby
>your humans die (disease, tribal warfare, etc.)
>hey there's plenty to eat here we don't need to be pets
Stray dogs aren't rare anywhere, but in Australia they had a niche with effectively no decent competition, so they thrived as an invasive species.