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Walter Voegtlin, in his book, The Stone Age Diet, gave examples which is amply demonstrated the differences between the digestive tracts of three animals of roughly equal size, which are familiar to us all: a sheep (herbivore), a dog (carnivore) and at a human.
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1 What are the animal groups. 2 What is the rumen. 3 What makes the ruminant different. 4 Why animals chew the cud (ruminate). ... · The horse, donkey and mule are herbivores but do not chew the cud. They are non-ruminants. ... · Cattle, goats, sheep and buffalo chew the cud. They are ruminants...
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How many hours a day does a cow chew her cud? ... Ruminants regurgitate their food and chew cud. (Cows are ruminants.) It helps them get the most out of difficult-to-digest foods like grass. A cow spends a lot of time eating – up to 8 hours per day.
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it states that hares chew the cud. Hares are not usually known as cud-chewing, or ruminating, animals. Is this really an error in the Bible, or did Moses know what he was talking about? When a cow swallows a mouthful of grass, it goes first of all to one compartment of the stomach referred to as the rumen.
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As best as I could find, there are 10 animals that meet the dual requirements of split hooves completely divided and chew their cud (which happens to coincide with Kosher requirements for mammals). ... These are: cows/beef (Bos taurus), sheep/lamb (Ovis aries), goats (Capra hircus), deer/ venison(cervidae),
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Cud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cud is a portion of food that returns from a ruminant's stomach in the mouth to be chewed for the second time. More accurately, it is a bolus of semi-degraded food regurgitated from the reticulorumen...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cud |
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