Was the Horse native to the Americas?

And where did it origine from in the begining of time, when did Humans start to use them and where was that? thanks

Horses have been used by European and Asian cultures since the beginning of recorded history, so it’s unlikely they were native to the Americas.

There is evidence of horses being domesticated as early as 2000BC in northern Europe and central Asia.

AFAIK horses were unknown in the Americas until European settlement began.

Actually, the ancestors of the modern horse were from the Americas, with a branch believed to be the forerunners of modern horses emigrating to Asia about 2.5 million years ago. The North American horses all died out about 11,000 years ago (along with many other large mammals).

There’s no evidence that humans in North America domesticated horses. One hypothesis (among others) is that newly arrived humans contributed to the extinction of North American mammals through hunting.

Equus species did live in the Americas, but disappeared about 10,000 years ago. From the wiki article:

According to Wikipedia, horses existed in North America in prehistoric times, but they went extinct around the time of the last ice age.

If I recall correctly, in Lone Star: A History of Texas and the Texans, T.R.R. Fehrenbach mentions the Pueblo Revolt (ca 1680) in New Mexico as being the first recorded time that Spanish horses were released into the wild in North America. Wikipedia claims that the first horses were lost by Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, a century and one half before, which seems more plausible. In any case, horses and horse culture spread across the North American continent and especially across the Great Plains over the next couple of centuries until Native Americans from Canada to Mexico had taken up riding.

The most recent National Geographic talks about this a bit, with the pro Wild Horses camp claiming that the mustang packs living in Wyoming and other places are not invasive, but are just reclaiming land that was temporarily without horses (due to the aforementioned die off).

Personally, I take the entire article with a HUGE grain of salt due to the authors absolutely crystal clear bias against the humans in the article.