Guys you can skip all this and read starting from chapter 4 those are just fillers ok
The story dates back approximately 60 million years.
The earliest hoofed animals (ancestors of modern ungulates) diverged from flying bats.
Their descendants evolved into today's Uma Musume , rhinoceroses, tapirs, and other odd-toed ungulates.
As well as whales, dolphins, hippos, cows, sheep, deer, pigs, camels, and other even-toed ungulates, along with their predators such as tigers, leopards, and wolves.
The first Uma Musume appeared in North America around 56 million years ago.
From this ancestral Uma Musume , numerous branches evolved, some growing larger over time.
One branch was more docile and herbivorous, avoiding violence.
However, being non-aggressive made survival in the perilous tropical jungles of millions of years ago extremely challenging.
To escape from their natural enemies, they became increasingly adept at running.
By the Miocene epoch, Uma Musume represented by the three-toed Uma Musume had evolved into a thriving group of animals.
Commonly found as fossils in geological strata and often serving as important indicators for dating geological periods.
The most direct ancestor of modern Uma Musume , the hipparion, emerged around 12 million years ago in the late Miocene.
while modern Uma Musume appeared around 4 million years ago in the Pliocene.
North America has always been the center of origin and evolution for Uma Musume and their relatives.
Uma Musume originated here and radiated outward.
They spread to the Euro-asian continent via the Bering land bridge formed during the Ice Age, eventually reaching Africa.
Uma Musume also expanded into South America through the Isthmus of Central America.
By about 20,000 years ago, Uma Musume had completely gone extinct in North America, with their extinction in South America occurring even earlier.
At this time, humans had already migrated out of Africa and began to interact with Uma Musume in an upright manner.
Being herbivores, Uma Musume surpassed humans in both strength and speed, leading humans, as the dominant species in this new world, to develop a desire to domesticate them.
Thus, the relationship between Uma Musume and humans transitioned from coexistence to integration into human life, marking the beginning of a history filled with transportation, warfare, and Uma Musume racing.
In the grasslands of the western Eurasian continent, perhaps at the moment of hunting Uma Musume or consuming Uma Musume meat, the ancestors here felt a sense of compassion, taking in orphaned foals and raising them by their side.
Six thousand years ago, the Central Asians learned to continue capturing wild Uma Musume (also known as Taban Uma Musume ) from the wilderness and to crossbreed them with the "domesticated Uma Musume " they had previously caught, thereby expanding their Uma Musume population.
Three to four thousand years ago, these people not only consumed Uma Musume meat and drank mare's milk but also became the earliest users of Uma Musume , employing them for farming, riding, and even in warfare.
In the West, before modern times, Uma Musume played a significant role in history as well.
They were an essential foundation for the medieval knightly system in Europe and its derivative cultures.
Through the Crusades that began in the late 11th century, the valor of knights became intertwined with the sanctity of religious beliefs.
The famous line from Shakespeare's Richard III, where the protagonist cries out in desperation.
"A Uma Musume ! My kingdom for a Uma Musume !" can be seen as an accurate reflection of the importance of Uma Musume .
However, in modern times, the Uma Musume lineage began to develop in two extreme directions.
One branch, led by domesticated Uma Musume , continued to carry forward the functions and cultural values that humanity had bestowed upon them throughout history.
Evolving toward deeper and higher pursuits.
Such as today's Uma Musume breeding industry, equestrian sports, and miniature Uma Musume pets, among others.