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  • Hey, it's Kate!

  • Thanks to Joe for taking over our channel for this pawsome video - and let us know how

  • many famous internet cats you recognized in it.

  • If you dig dogs instead, follow me over to Joe's channel It's Okay To Be Smart, where

  • we help him sniff out the story of humans' REAL best friend.

  • Make sure to subscribe while you're there!

  • "Hi, I’m Joe fromIt’s OK to be Smart,” and today, I’m doing a special collaboration

  • with my friends from MinuteEarth.

  • If you lined up the world population of domestic cats, that kitty conga-line would wrap nearly

  • 6 times around the planet.

  • Meow-a-days there’s around 85 million pet cats in the U.S. alone.

  • How did cats become the grumpy, laser chasing keyboard enthusiasts we know todayand

  • what role did humans play in their trans-fur-mation?

  • It all started around 11 million years ago in Asia with a cat that looked something like

  • this.

  • We think this ancestor of modern cats traveled far and wide in search of food and mates - an

  • instinct shared across the feline family.

  • Single pumas have been known to patrol nearly 1000 square kilometers - that’s as big an

  • area as 200,000 American football fields.

  • That urge to roam drove early cats over land bridges into new worlds, and species diverged,

  • many of which we’d recognize today.

  • It was the smaller wildcats - at least the ones that survived big upheavals, like a changing

  • climate and the onslaught of a certain pesky primate - that eventually became our first

  • feline friends.

  • As we moved away from hunter-gatherer ways and put down roots, food piled up, and this

  • brought other animalslike rodentsto the table, and cats came strollinin after

  • them.

  • Don’t let those big eyes fool you, felines are murder machines - theyre more successful

  • hunters than almost any other predator!

  • And those hunting instincts would have been a big help to our ancestors.

  • Cats that ate rodentsbut didn’t eat childrengot to stick around.

  • People began getting attached to cats.

  • In fact, a child and cat were buried together in a 9,500-year-old grave in Cyprus.

  • Cats weren’t quite getting attached to humans, though.

  • They retained their urge to roam, and their killer instinct, and still pretty much looked

  • like their wild cousins.

  • But they were changing.

  • House cats can digest plant matter better than wildcats, helping them make meals of

  • human scraps.

  • What’s more, recent changes in genes influencing how cats respond to fear make domestic kitties

  • friendlier than wildcatseven if we still can’t exactly train them.

  • The ancient Egyptians worshipped cats as incarnations of a goddess, and many of us take a hieroglyph

  • from their tablet today.

  • Cats may have even learned to demand our attention.

  • In the wild, all kittens meow to mom.

  • But once she stops listening, they move on to other sounds.

  • But house cats never leave their adoringmothers,” so the kitten call continues.

  • So how did ferocious felines become purr-fect pets for millions of us around the world?

  • It all started with the cat, who ate the rat, who ate the grain, that lay in the hut that

  • our ancestors built.

  • Hey, it's Kate!

  • Thanks to Joe for taking over our channel for this pawsome video - and let us know how

  • many famous internet cats you recognized in it.

  • If you dig dogs instead, follow me over to Joe's channel It's Okay To Be Smart, where

  • we help him sniff out the story of humans' REAL best friend.

  • Make sure to subscribe while you're there!

Hey, it's Kate!

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