PRE-HISTORIC WOMEN LIVED WITH HORSES, NOT MEN

PRE-HISTORIC WOMEN LIVED WITH HORSES, NOT MEN

LOS ANGELES (Wireless Flash) -- Here some news that may make you say, "Whoa, Nellie": A Korean researcher claims that prehistoric women spent more time with horses than men. Historian Yup Lee says up until 100,000 years ago, men and women lived apart from each other and only made whoopie once a year during the wet season. The rest of the year, prehistoric women were nomadic and survived by following wild horses to food sources. Lee says this isolation of the sexes explains why men and women are alien creatures to each other even today. Lee is the author of the new book, "Man As The Prayer: The Origin And Nature Of Humankind" (Trafford).