Question:

Can you guess what a quagga was?

by  |  earlier

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NB was ,not is.

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13 ANSWERS


  1. A large now extinct flightless bird,with zebra stripes and wi-fi


  2. Extinct zebra.lasted up to the late 19th century.They have tried via DNA cloning to reproduce it.

  3. A bit like a zebra wasn't it?

    EDIT

    I didn't google it!

  4. I swear I knew before I read the other answers :D I also know that they tried to recreate it a few years ago (I can't remember who did it) and it kind of worked but wasn't that successful. I seem to recall they ended up with horses with stripy legs...a bit like what a quagga looked like I suppose.

  5. Well seen as everyone reading this is on the internet, they will simply google it.

    "The quagga is an extinct subspecies of the plains zebra"

  6. Was was right, it is now extinct, a zebra like animal.

  7. Thanks i found a beautiful photograph of one it was taken at Regent Parks Zoo she died in 1886

  8. yeah it is a half horse and half zebra..it is actually a zebra..but there was an instance when it lost some of its stripes so that is what happened to it...the last guagga was seen i think the late 1800's....

  9. The "quagga" is an extinct member of the equine family. Originally from SA looking more like a horse than zebra. The striped marking were distinct on the neck and head and faded from the withers and disappeared altogether from the back. It is believed that the last known stallion was owned by Lord Morton in 1870. Hope that helps.

  10. An animal or mammal that lives in a Mire?

  11. he quagga is an extinct subspecies of the plains zebra,[1] which was once found in great numbers in South Africa's Cape Province and the southern part of the Orange Free State. It was distinguished from other zebras by having the usual vivid marks on the front part of the body only. In the mid-section, the stripes faded and the dark, inter-stripe spaces became wider, and the rear parts were a plain brown. The name comes from a Khoikhoi word for zebra and is onomatopoeic, being said to resemble the quagga's call. The only quagga to ever have been photographed alive was the Regent's Park Zoo mare in London.

  12. a speech empediments attempt at a racial slur (cracker)

  13. Yes it is a know extinct animal similar to a zebra.

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