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Long before Instagram, humans were already posting about their dogs on cave walls. Some of the earliest depictions of canines alongside people appear in prehistoric rock art dating back thousands of years. In regions like Saudi Arabia, archaeologists have documented rock carvings (petroglyphs) estimated to be around 8,000-9,000 years old that show dogs accompanying hunters - sometimes even on leashes. Leashes! Which means that at some point in deep prehistory, someone looked at a wolf-descended companion and thought “You are coming with me, but respectfully”.
Similar scenes appear in other parts of the world, suggesting dogs were not just tolerated scavengers but active hunting partners. These images aren’t abstract blobs - they show distinct ears, tails, and body shapes. In other words, ancient humans considered dogs important enough to immortalize in stone. That implies cooperation, reliance, and probably a lot of shared campfire scraps. Civilization was still figuring itself out, but the human-dog friendship? Already carved in rock.
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One popular theory about dog domestication suggests that wolves essentially invited themselves into human society. Instead of humans capturing and taming wolf pups en masse, some researchers propose that less fearful wolves began hanging around human camps to scavenge leftovers. The boldest and least aggressive individuals would have had the greatest access to food. Over generations, natural selection may have favored wolves that were calmer and more tolerant of humans, gradually shifting behavior and even physical traits. This concept is supported in part by experiments like the long-running Russian fox domestication study, which showed that selecting for tameness alone can lead to changes in appearance and temperament.
That said, the full story of dog domestication is still debated. It likely involved a complex mix of human influence and wolf adaptation over thousands of years. So did wolves domesticate themselves? Possibly partly. But humans were definitely active participants in the world’s longest-running interspecies partnership.
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