Sometime around 3500 B.C.E., a community of semi-sedentary people living on the grasslands of what is now northern Kazakhstan changed the relationship between humans and horses in ways the world would feel for millennia. The Botai culture left behind hundreds of pit-houses, vast quantities of horse bones, corral-like enclosures, and pottery with traces of mare’s milk — the earliest known evidence that people were keeping, riding, and breeding horses rather than simply hunting them.
What the evidence shows
- Botai horse domestication: Researchers found horse bones showing skeletal changes consistent with breeding and bit wear, along with lipid residues in pottery confirming mare’s milk — pushing confirmed horse husbandry back to roughly 3500 B.C.E., nearly 1,000 years earlier than the previous scientific consensus.
- Corral evidence: Large-scale deposits of horse dung and enclosed settlement structures suggest the Botai were managing horses in pens or corrals, a defining feature of pastoralist rather than hunter-gatherer practice.
- Coat color genetics: DNA from Botai horse remains includes the TRPM1 locus, which produces leopard-spotted coats — and causes night blindness. Horses carrying two copies of this gene would be extremely vulnerable on open steppes without human protection, making a strong case for deliberate breeding under human care.
Who the Botai people were
The Botai were not nomads. They built permanent settlements of more than 160 pit-houses — substantial, insulated structures dug partially into the earth for warmth on the cold steppe. Their economy centered almost entirely on horses: the bones found at their sites suggest horse meat was the primary food source, and the evidence for milking indicates they were extracting sustenance from living animals, not just slaughtering them.
Genetically, the Botai trace their ancestry primarily to Ancient North Eurasian and Western Siberian hunter-gatherer populations, with some contribution from ancient East Asian lineages. They were not the ancestors of later steppe cultures like the Yamnaya, who would eventually spread across Eurasia — the Botai appear to have been largely replaced, culturally and genetically, by those later peoples.
Their language remains unidentified. Linguist Asko Parpola has suggested the Botai may have spoken a language unrelated to any known family, and that some horse-related vocabulary in later Uralic languages may be borrowed from that lost tongue. It is a reminder of how much of the human past exists only in fragments.
A pivotal relationship between humans and horses
The horse would go on to reshape human history more thoroughly than almost any other animal. Mounted warfare, long-distance trade, agriculture at scale, and the rapid spread of cultures and languages across continents all depended on the human-horse partnership. The spread of horses across Eurasia is now understood to have accelerated the movement of peoples, goods, and ideas in ways that had no precedent.
The Botai may have been the first people to ride. Three types of wear found on Botai horse jaw bones suggest the use of bits — physical controls that only make sense if someone was steering. Riding a horse rather than simply herding it on foot would have transformed what a small community of steppe-dwellers could do: cover ground faster, manage larger herds, scout farther.
Some researchers have also pointed to the cultural and cognitive dimensions of horse domestication. A landmark 2009 study in Science presenting the pottery lipid and bone morphology data described the Botai findings as reorienting the entire timeline of human-animal relationships on the Eurasian steppe.
Lasting impact
The Botai horse domestication evidence matters beyond its age. It established that horse husbandry emerged in the Central Asian steppe environment specifically — among people whose entire diet, economy, and settlement pattern had already adapted around horses. That ecological context helps explain why domestication happened here rather than elsewhere first.
Though Botai horses were the ancestors of Przewalski’s horses — the last truly wild horse lineage, now preserved through conservation programs — rather than modern domestic horses, the Botai achievement likely influenced neighboring cultures and contributed knowledge and practice to the broader process of horse husbandry across Eurasia. Genetic evidence suggests modern domestic horses were subsequently domesticated in other centers, possibly building on techniques or cultural exchange that flowed outward from early experiments like the Botai’s.
The horse partnership also enabled something subtler: sedentary life on the open steppe. By managing horses rather than following wild herds, the Botai could stay in one place, build permanent communities, accumulate resources, and develop the social complexity that comes with dense settlement. Their 160-house villages were not small.
Blindspots and limits
The picture is not settled. More recent analysis of dental calculus from Botai individuals found no evidence of dairy consumption in their own diets — raising questions about how to interpret the pottery lipid evidence for mare’s milk. It is possible milking was used to hand-rear foals rather than as a food source, which would alter but not eliminate the domestication interpretation.
More significantly, the Botai horses themselves were not the direct ancestors of the horses that eventually spread across the world. A major 2021 study in Nature traced modern domestic horses to a later domestication event, likely in the western Eurasian steppe. This does not erase what the Botai accomplished, but it means the story of how humans and horses became partners is more complex — possibly involving multiple independent domestications — than a single “first time” narrative allows.
The Botai also left no writing, and their language is lost. Their genetic lineage was largely absorbed or displaced by later steppe peoples. What survives is bones, dung, pottery, and the faint imprint of a world organized around horses — evidence enough to change what we thought we knew, but not enough to tell us everything we want to know.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Botai culture
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights advance at COP30 with 160 million hectares recognized
- Uganda reintroduces rhinos to Kidepo Valley
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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