Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - A dog folded with the simplest towel

A dog folded with the simplest towel

The simplest dog steps for towel folding are as follows:

Smooth a rectangular towel, roll it in at one side, roll it out at the other side, roll it in the middle and put it in a U shape. Take another towel, fold it in half, aim the opening at a quarter of the towel, and fold the extra quarter backwards. Lift one corner of the opening and fold it forward, as does the other corner. The two sides are rolled into the middle respectively, and then the corners in front of the ears are turned down and stuffed to the side. Put the two parts together and tidy them up. In this way, a towel dog is ready.

Information supplement:

Dogs belong to Chordata, Vertebrate, Mammalia, Orthoptera, Carnivora, Schipoda and Canidae. Chinese is also called "dog", and dogs are distributed all over the world. Dogs, horses, cows, sheep, pigs and chickens are also called the traditional "six animals".

Some scientists believe that dogs were domesticated by early humans from the gray wolf, and the domestication time was from 40,000 years ago to 1.5 million years ago. Known as "the most loyal friend of mankind", it is the pet with the highest reproductive rate, and its life span is about 12~ 18 years. In China culture, dogs belong to one of the 12 Zodiacs, ranking 1 1 among the 12 Zodiacs.

Dogs are domesticated by wolves. As early as the era of hunting and gathering, people have domesticated dogs as hunting assistants. So dogs are the earliest domesticated domestic animals. Dog bones have been found in Cishan, Wu 'an, Hebei, Peiligang, Xinzheng, Henan and Hemudu, Yuyao, Zhejiang, which proves that it has a long history of domestication.

The dog-shaped scorpion unearthed from Sanlihe River in Jiaoxian County, Shandong Province is vivid and lifelike, which makes us see the morphological characteristics of domestic dogs in Neolithic Age. The dog bones unearthed from Anbanpo site in Xi 'an, Shaanxi, have smaller skulls, protruding frontal bones, smaller teeth and curved horizontal edge of mandible, which is quite different from that of North China wolves, indicating that the history of human domestication of dogs is indeed very early.