[77596] in Daily_Rumour

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Your Reward Worth

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Congratulations)
Mon Mar 24 07:57:39 2025

Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2025 12:55:55 +0100
From: "Congratulations" <ConfirmationNeeded@headlampvision.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Ultimate Offers Program" <Congratulations@headlampvision.ru.com>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>

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Your Reward Worth

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http://headlampvision.ru.com/6y4oTLNLPrRaFCM1DUfKWqnD2jFJeBXD6nXy21zSyTT4AfyVsg

sician, ornithologist, and artist John Latham first described the hyacinth macaw in 1790 under the binomial name Psittacus hyacinthinus. Tony Pittman in 2000 hypothesized that although the illustration in this work appears to be of an actual hyacinthine macaw, Latham's description of the length of the bird might mean he had measured a specimen of Lear's macaw instead. However, Latham's description was based on a taxidermic specimen, which was the only one Latham knew to exist up until 1822. It was prepared from a living animal originally belonging to Lord Orford, and given to the land agent Parkinson for display in the Leverian Museum after it died.

Nonetheless, Latham mentions another bird, which he calls the 'blue maccaw', supposedly the same size. This blue macaw was already described in Latham's 1781 volume of his A general synopsis of birds as merely a variety of the blue and yellow macaw, and was previously figured in the work of Mathurin Jacques Brisson (1760), Patrick Browne (1756) and Eleazar Albin (1738) as a macaw found in Jamaica. Albin, Browne and Brisson all reference even older authors and state the bird also occurs on the mainland, and Albin states this bird is the female version of the scarlet macaw. Latham mentions that the provenance of parrots in general was often confused by the fact that the birds were much traded acr

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			<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">sician, ornithologist, and artist John Latham first described the hyacinth macaw in 1790 under the binomial name Psittacus hyacinthinus. Tony Pittman in 2000 hypothesized that although the illustration in this work appears to be of an actual hyacinthine macaw, Latham&#39;s description of the length of the bird might mean he had measured a specimen of Lear&#39;s macaw instead. However, Latham&#39;s description was based on a taxidermic specimen, which was the only one Latham knew to exist up until 1822. It was prepared from a living animal originally belonging to Lord Orford, and given to the land agent Parkinson for display in the Leverian Museum after it died. Nonetheless, Latham mentions another bird, which he calls the &#39;blue maccaw&#39;, supposedly the same size. This blue macaw was already described in Latham&#39;s 1781 volume of his A general synopsis of birds as merely a variety of the blue and yellow macaw, and was previously figured in the work of Mathurin Jacques Brisson (1760), Patrick Browne (1756) and Eleazar Albin (1738) as a macaw found in Jamaica. Albin, Browne and Brisson all reference even older authors and state the bird also occurs on the mainland, and Albin states this bird is the female version of the scarlet macaw. Latham mentions that the provenance of parrots in general was often confused by the fact that the birds were much traded acr</div>
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