From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9724 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 Tuesday, September 13 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9724 Today's Subjects: ----------------- How to get hard & stay hard naturally (do before bed) ["30 Second Ritual"] BONUS: $100 WALGREENS Gift Card Opportunity ["Walgreens Shopper Gift Card] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 10 Sep 2022 09:31:36 -0400 From: "30 Second Ritual" <10secondritual@abokov.ru.com> Subject: How to get hard & stay hard naturally (do before bed) How to get hard & stay hard naturally (do before bed) http://abokov.ru.com/uONqqt-5dPQ5eDKiMWwl1Gc3peGAdl-6BxSj0THIee73q_gdIA http://abokov.ru.com/kGOz49LWhc6LV0wJViC5eUqsjgpJacZK9tbxyurjjdC-o0CsFA Aves, and also Michael Scotus (who had removed to Palermo) translated Ibn S?n?'s Kit?b al-?ayaw?n of 1027 for the Emperor, a commentary and scientific update of Aristotle's work which was part of Ibn S?n?'s massive Kit?b al-E if??. Frederick II eventually wrote his own treatise on falconry, the De arte venandi cum avibus, in which he related his ornithological observations and the results of the hunts and experiments his court enjoyed performing. Several early German and French scholars compiled old works and conducted new research on birds. These included Guillaume Rondelet, who described his observations in the Mediterranean, and Pierre Belon, who described the fish and birds that he had seen in France and the Levant. Belon's Book of Birds (1555) is a folio volume with descriptions of some 200 species. His comparison of the skeleton of humans and birds is considered as a landmark in comparative anatomy. Volcher Coiter (1534b1576), a Dutch anatomist, made detailed studies of the internal structures of birds and produced a classification of birds, De Differentiis Avium (around 1572), that was based on structure and habits. Konrad Gesner wrote the Vogelbuch and Icones avium omnium around 1557. Like Gesner, Ulisse Aldrovandi, an encyclopedic naturalist, began a 14-volume natural history with three volumes on birds, entitled ornithologiae hoc est de avibus historiae libri XII, which was published from 1599 to 1603. Aldrovandi showed great interest in plants and animals, and his work included 3000 drawings of fruits, flowers, plants, and animals, published in 363 volumes. His Ornithology alone covers 2000 pages and included such aspects as the chicken and poultry techniques. He used a number of traits including behaviour, particularly bathing and dusting, to classify bird groups. Cover of Ulisse Aldrovandi's Ornithology, 1599 Antonio Valli da Todi, who wrote on aviculture in 1601, knew the connections between territory and song William Turner's Historia Avium (History of Birds), published at Cologne in 1544, was an early ornithological work from England. He noted the commonness of kites in English cities where they snatched food out of the hands of children. He included folk beliefs such as those of anglers. Anglers believed that the osprey emptied their fishponds and would kill them, mixing the flesh of the osprey into their fish bait. Turner's work reflected the violent times in which he lived, and stands in contrast to later works such as Gilbert White's 1789 The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne that were written in a tranquil era. In the 17th century, Francis Willughby (1635b1672) and John Ray (1627b1705) came up with the first major system of bird classification that was based on function and morphology rather than on form or be ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 10 Sep 2022 07:17:29 -0400 From: "Walgreens Shopper Gift Card Chance" Subject: BONUS: $100 WALGREENS Gift Card Opportunity BONUS: $100 WALGREENS Gift Card Opportunity hhttp://bloodpressure.sa.com/W5Nbr1b1mE7sHJyfP_0lgINq5yPGiIJTSxisUsDSMMR9T4jdnw http://bloodpressure.sa.com/eWWhPjZIVJl0UeiM6yH5n2fLpuRHfXpAHIz6FBViHhPTMxT-nw ne of the people who helped figure out the vertebrate progression was French zoologist Georges Cuvier (1769b1832), who realized that fossils found in older rock strata differed greatly from more recent fossils or modern animals. He published his findings in 1812 and, although he steadfastly refuted evolution, his work proved the (at the time) contested theory of extinction of species. Thomas Jefferson is credited with initiating the science of vertebrate paleontology in the United States with the reading of a paper to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia in 1797. Jefferson presented fossil bones of a ground sloth found in a cave in western Virginia and named the genus (Megalonyx). The species was ultimately named Megalonyx jeffersonii in his honor. Jefferson corresponded with Cuvier, including sending him a shipment of highly desirable bones of the American mastodon and the woolly mammoth. Paleontology really got started though, with the publication of Recherches sur les poissons fossiles (1833b1843) by Swiss naturalist Louis Agassiz (1807b1873). He studied, described and listed hundreds of species of fossil fish, beginning the serious study into the lives of extinct animals. With the publication of the Origin of Species b ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9724 **********************************************