Oxford sheep (also known as Oxford Down)[1] is an English breed developed in the 1830s by crossing the Cotswold with a forerunner of the Hampshire, and using the resulting cross-breeds to form the basis of the present-day breed.[2] This breed is primarily raised for meat.[1]
The fleece of the Oxford is short, relatively large-bodied, hornless, has a brown face and legs covered in light brown wool.[3] The Oxford produces the heaviest fleece of any of the Down breeds. The breed's capacity to produce a large, meaty carcase for further processing has stimulated interest from the meat industry, and it also grows the most wool of any of the terminal sire breeds.[2]
Mature weights for rams range from 200 to 300 lb (91 to 140 kg), ewes are smaller weighing between 150 to 200 lb (68 to 91 kg). Fleeces from mature ewes weigh between 8 to 12 lb (3.6 to 5.4 kg) with a fiber diameter of 30.0 to 34.5 micrometres and a numerical count of 46 to 50. The staple length of the fleece ranges from 3 to 5 in (7.6 to 13 cm) and has a yield of 50 to 62%.[4]