Bos primigenius
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun 1. Aurochs: A large, long-horned species of wild cattle (Bos primigenius) that was native to Europe, Asia, and North Africa and became extinct in the 17th century. It is considered a primary ancestor of modern domestic cattle.
Usage
- The term Bos primigenius is the scientific (Latin) name for the species commonly known as the aurochs.
- It is used primarily in academic, scientific, and historical contexts when discussing zoology, paleontology, archaeology, or the domestication of animals.
- In general English, the common name "aurochs" is more frequently used.
Examples
- Scientific Context: "Fossil evidence indicates that had a much wider range than its historical European habitat."
- Historical Context: "Cave paintings often depict , showing its importance to prehistoric humans."
- Biological Context: "Genetic studies confirm that is a direct ancestor of modern taurine cattle."
Advanced Usage
- The name Bos primigenius can be used to specify the exact species in discussions where distinguishing between different ancient bovine species (like the European aurochs vs. the Indian aurochs, ) is important.
Variants and Related Words
- Aurochs (n.): The common English name for .
- Example: The last known aurochs died in Poland in 1627.
- Urus (n.): An archaic term for the aurochs.
- Wild ox (n.): A descriptive general term.
Synonyms
- Aurochs
- Urus (archaic)
- Wild cattle (general)
Related Terms (Not Synonyms)
- Bison (n.): A different, though similarly large, bovine species (genus ).
- Wisent (n.): The European bison ().
- Domestic cattle (n.): The domesticated descendants of .
Noun
- large recently extinct long-horned European wild ox; considered one of the ancestors of domestic cattle