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The
Carolinas are part of what Brisbin calls "the great arc of the
red dog," the worldwide distribution of pariah canids. From
their probable point of evolution somewhere in Southwest Asia
or the Middle East, the ancestors of todays domestic dogs spread
out in tandem with humans into Africa; and southeast through
Java, Australia, New Guinea and then island-hopping through
the South Pacific in rafis and canoes; north through Korea,
Japan, Siberia and then into North and South America.
In remote corners of the world,
away from the later waves of European dogs that hybridized local
varieties out of existence, some of the original dogs still
survive. Unlike the Carolinas, their ancient lineage is undisputed.
The most intriguing, and perhaps the most primitive, is the
New Guinea singingdog. Low-slung and muscular, weighing about
25 pounds, with short legs, a long torso and a wide face, it
is a curiously feline dog with an ability to climb and jump
that is unmatched by any other breed-a handy trait in the sodden,
jumbled forests of the New Guinea mountains, where it can scramble
up trees like a cat. The name comes from its weird, harmonic
howls, whose unearthly qualities prompted one of the highland
tribes to claim the Creator had replaced the dog's tongue with
the quill of a cassowary, a native bird. These dogs are truly
wild animals and rarely seen.
Although singing dogs have been
in New Guinea for at least 4,000 years, living examples were
only discovered by the outside world in the 1950s. At that time,
they were classified as a separate species of wild canict, although
today they are officially grouped with the domestic dog.
Unfortunately, purebred singers
have all but vanished from New Guinea as European dogs have
moved into the highlands. Today only about a hundred exist in
captivity, the descendants of a handful of vald-caught animals,
and most of those have been goneutered or are too old to breed.
Brisbin has a couple of pairs andhas been working closely with
Janice KolerMatznick of Central Point, Oregon, an expert on
singers who has founded the Primitive and Aboriginal Dog Society
to promote the conservation of ancient canids.
As the singing dog adapted to
the rigors of life in the wet forests of New Guinea, so did
dogs elsewhere evolve to fit the local climate and conditions-
both through natural selection and selective breeding by humans.
There may have been hybridizing with wolves, coyotes and other
wild canids, further stirring the genetic pot. Based on skeletal
remains found at ancient village sites, it appears there were
recognizably different types of domestic dogs thousands of years
ago, from tiny toy-size breeds to animals with the heft of modem
mastiffs.
While bones tell part of the
story, they say little about a dog's outward appearance. Fortunately,
in the case of early dogs in the Americas, pre-Columbian art,
the accounts of early explorers and works of frontier artists
fill in some of the blanks. The average Indian dog apparently
looked like a dingo-with a fairly short coat, upcurved tail
and upright ears. Judging from 19th-century paintings, the Iroquois
raised dogs that would look at home in Brisbin's pack of Carolinas.
Along the Northwest coast around
Vancouver Island and the Olympic Peninsula, the Makah and Coast
Salish tribes kept two breeds, both now extinct-a typical, dingo-like
village dog, and a smaller, longhaired variety with a tightly
curled tail raised exclusively for its fur, which was woven
into blankets. Dogs in the Arctic, sub-arctic and Great Plains,
on the other hand, resembled wolves, with large frames, heavy
coats and shaggy tails.
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