
Ezra
Cat
types of cats
1.British Shorthair.
2.Persian Cats
3.Maine Coon Cats
4.American Shorthair Cats
5.Scottish Fold Cats
6.Sphynx Cats.
7.Abyssinian Cats
8.Devon Rex Cats
9.Exotic Shorthair Cats
10.Ragdoll Cats
for more information see this book called “How to talk to your cat about gun safety”
personal stories on my cat Ezra
we hapersonal stories on my catve a cat named kitty kitty has been our cat for about one year he is a gray cat and is pretty small but that doesn’t make him less ferocious she has a friend named pixel who lives up the street owning Kitty as a very nice sometimes I will sleep with him or just pet them he comes home most nights sometimes he doesn’t but that hasn’t happened in a long time since our neighbors got a dog he’s been coming home a lot
History
It has taken a while for scientists to piece together the riddle of just when and where cats first became domesticated. One would think that the archaeological record might answer the question easily, but wild cats and domesticated cats have remarkably similar skeletons, complicating the matter. Some clues first came from the island of Cyprus in 1983, when archaeologists found a cat’s jawbone dating back 8,000 years. Since it seemed highly unlikely that humans would have brought wild cats over to the island (a “spitting, scratching, panic-stricken wild feline would have been the last kind of boat companion they would have wanted,” writes Desmond Morris in Catworld: A Feline Encyclopedia), the finding suggested that domestication occurred before 8,000 years ago.
In 2004, the unearthing of an even older site at Cyprus, in which a cat had been deliberately buried with a human, made it even more certain that the island’s ancient cats were domesticated, and pushed the domestication date back at least another 1,500 years.
Just last month, a study published in the research journal Science secured more pieces in the cat-domestication puzzle based on genetic analyses. All domestic cats, the authors declared, descended from a Middle Eastern wildcat, Felis sylvestris, which literally means “cat of the woods.” Cats were first domesticated in the Near East, and some of the study authors speculate that the process began up to 12,000 years ago.
Viena