From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10682 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Friday, February 10 2023 Volume 14 : Number 10682 Today's Subjects: ----------------- $50 Off Home Warranty Insurance Plans ["AHW Plumbing Systems" Subject: $50 Off Home Warranty Insurance Plans $50 Off Home Warranty Insurance Plans http://smartbloodsuger.live/vtnoMknEk8bKdnRahXysS-2dnUaOLJH0Q6fJ4OVIBTsuYv5X1w http://smartbloodsuger.live/UVOEt-enNuB2k9Rd5hIQRI8hfrZrrWm2aliqYBbotOBwNhKh The largest of the Australian corvids, the adult forest raven is 50b53 cm (20b21 in) in length with a wingspan between 91b113 cm (36b44 in) and weight of approximately 650 g (1.43 lb). There is no seasonal variation in plumage, which is entirely glossy black with a blue or green sheen visible on the upperparts. The wings are long and broad, with the largest of its ten primary feathers (usually the seventh but occasionally the eighth) almost reaching the end of the tail when at rest. The tail is rounded or wedge-shaped. It is quite short in Tasmanian populations but longer in northern New South Wales. The beak is a similar shape to that of the little raven, though more massive and heavy-set. The upper mandible, including the nares and nasal groove, is covered with bristles. The mouth and tongue are black, as are the powerful legs and feet. The tibia is fully feathered and the tarsus is long. Sexes have identical plumage; the male is generally larger, but there is considerable overlap in size between individuals. The forest raven can be distinguished from the two species of crow occurring in Australia by the grey base of the feathers, which is white in the latter species. The demarcation between pale and black regions on the feather is gradual in the ravens and sharply delineated in the crows. Feather bases are not normally visible when observing ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2023 10:51:32 +0100 From: "Ace Customer Support" <170PieceStanleyToolSetDepartment@bulletprrofhome.shop> Subject: Late Payment Notification. Your package could not be delivered. Late Payment Notification. Your package could not be delivered. http://bulletprrofhome.shop/1TlqXJi36S8UUts8V0VNR0FYhXIutiT6L_9i95hNB_8CkFIQuw http://bulletprrofhome.shop/jXiLhheCdQBqhIi04Xd43wdhR7vG9zrGuG4AJyvKAolF3MxyJg Davis was born in Dublin, Texas, on December 1, 1920. He was the seventh of nine children born to George Davis Sr. and Pearl Love Davis. In his childhood, Davis briefly lived in Maple, Texas. Davis attended Morton High School in Morton, Texas. Davis then attended Harding College in Searcy, Arkansas. After completing a degree, he returned to Texas. He took up farming for a time with his family before eventually deciding to join the military. Friends and colleagues would later describe Davis as quiet, calm, and reserved as well as a natural leader. When flying, he would become "cool and calculating" in combat. He did not drink alcohol or smoke tobacco, unlike many other pilots, and he had a subdued personality in spite of his "daredevil" flying style. Davis married Doris Lynn Forgason, and was survived by three children, Mary Margaret Davis (born 1944) and George Davis III (born 1952). His wife was six months pregnant with their third child, Charles Lynn Davis, at the time of his death in ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2023 14:13:55 +0100 From: "Bank Of America Shopper Feedback" Subject: Congratulations! You can get a $90 Bank of America gift card! Congratulations! You can get a $90 Bank of America gift card! http://walgreensurvey.today/ZolGOMt6pxQG8gdhKDg2-Y0-MPstG_8cYq5IZxyCRD00kXLPcw http://walgreensurvey.today/1uPgz2w7Jzf37arzPMB8_JNzQAM46RSgOHTuXezR7YhCrAb3YA The forest raven (Corvus tasmanicus), also commonly known as the Tasmanian raven, is a passerine bird in the family Corvidae native to Tasmania and parts of southern Victoria, such as Wilsons Promontory and Portland. Populations are also found in parts of New South Wales, including Dorrigo and Armidale. Measuring 50b53 cm (20b21 in) in length, it has all-black plumage, beak and legs. As with the other two species of raven in Australia, its black feathers have grey bases. Adults have white irises; younger birds have dark brown and then hazel irises with an inner blue rim. New South Wales populations are recognised as a separate subspecies C. tasmanicus boreus, but appear to be nested within the Tasmanian subspecies genetically. The forest raven lives in a wide variety of habitats in Tasmania but is restricted to more closed forest on mainland Australia. Breeding takes place in spring and summer, occurring later in Tasmania than in New South Wales. The nest is a bowl-shaped structure of sticks sited high in a tree. An omnivorous and opportunistic feeder, it eats a wide variety of plant and animal material, as well as food waste from urban areas and roadkill. It ha ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Feb 2023 16:15:32 +0100 From: "Battery Secret" Subject: Little Known Way To Bring Nearly ANY Dead Battery Back To Life again.. Little Known Way To Bring Nearly ANY Dead Battery Back To Life again.. http://batteryreconditing.cyou/kxNC9cA9WX4N1aLJ5BKvFOSv7oSv5zG1tCuqSa1Jecd4mTm8BA http://batteryreconditing.cyou/RnWVkGsBBOCS-narlRuHZkvY7rLHf6l1mje-tAyeoMYtRKzhVw he forest raven is an omnivore, though it eats more meat than other smaller corvids. Its diet includes a wide range of foods such as insects, carrion, fruit, grain, and earthworms. It has been known to attack and eat birds as large as the little penguin, though many birds and mammals are already dead when encountered. In general, a significant proportion of its food appears to come from habitats in or near water. Forest ravens observed on the beach at Wilson's Promontory would glean the sand and turn over or disturb pieces of seaweed and debris for insect prey. They have also been reported taking crabs from sandbars and raiding seabird colonies for eggs and young. Forest ravens forage in pairs or groups of up to ten birds, though they may gather in much larger numbers if there is an abundant food source, such as a large carcass, rubbish, or insect swarm. The species is attracted to areas where people have discarded excess food, such as rubbish tips, picnic grounds, parks, gardens, and roads. Forest ravens sometimes forage in mixed-species flocks with Torresian crows, little and Australian ravens. In these situations, the more abundant species may exclude the less abundant. In Tasmania, forest ravens have b ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2023 14:58:30 +0100 From: "Ace Rewards" Subject: Your chance to receive a FREE 170 Piece Stanley Tool Set Your chance to receive a FREE 170 Piece Stanley Tool Set http://walgreensurvey.today/KoqrI8g7PxzE-TV67OEITqRfaOdmN1uHIjLt3h7WqDw1At8exA http://walgreensurvey.today/Yg8rBiFxuM9UVFFrUiaKFGqZGYqzHgZEbguV9Wd47gOFP5DPNQ ince Australia was settled by Europeans, all species of crows and ravens have been colloquially known as crows by the general population and are difficult to distinguish. In his 1865 Handbook to the Birds of Australia, John Gould noted a single species of corvid in Australia, Corvus australis, which he called the white-eyed crow. He used Gmelin's 1788 name, which took precedence by virtue of its age over Vigors and Horsfield's description. In 1912 Scottish naturalist William Robert Ogilvie-Grant clarified the species as C. coronoides (raven, and incorporating little and Australian ravens) and C. cecilae (Torresian crow). Subsequently, French-American ornithologist Charles Vaurie acted as First Revisor under Article 24 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) Code and discarded C. australis as a junior homonymbin 1788, Gmelin had used the same binomial name to describe the black nunbirdbto preserve the stability of the name. This has been followed by later authors. Gregory Mathews described the forest raven as a distinct subspeciesbCorvus marianae tasmanicusbof the Australian raven in 1912, its species name derived from Tasmania, the type locality. Rowley raised the forest raven to species rank in 1970, noting there were no intermediate forms between it and the little raven (its closest relative) and that it was clearly larger with a much more massive bill. He described a second subspeciesbCorvus tasmanicus boreusbt ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10682 ***********************************************