Answer:
What we know as horses today are evolved from much smaller ancestors.
Step-by-step explanation:
The older, and smaller, horse fossils are found in the lower layers of rock.
The changes in horses over the last 55 million years have been shown by studies of large numbers of fossils. The earliest kind of horse was small and had teeth that were adapted to browsing on young shoots of trees and shrubs. The present-day horse is much larger and has larger teeth that are adapted to grazing on the tough leaves of grasses. Early horses were adapted to living in wooded, swampy areas where more toes were an advantage. The single-hoofed toes of the present-day horse allow it to travel fast in the plains.
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