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Claim your free patriot survival saw

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Survival Saw)
Thu Feb 5 07:16:47 2026

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Date: Thu, 5 Feb 2026 13:16:45 +0100
From: "Survival Saw" <SurvivalSaw@salezone.sa.com>
Reply-To: "Patriot Saw" <SurvivalSaw@salezone.sa.com>
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Claim your free patriot survival saw

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ow. J. Denis Summers-Smith considered that the Palaearctic Passer sparrows evolved about 25,000 to 15,000 years ago, during the last glacial period. During this time, sparrows would have been isolated in ice-free refugia, such as a certain steppe region in Central Asia, where Summers-Smith suggested the saxaul sparrow evolved. Genetic and fossil evidence suggest a much earlier origin for the Passer species, perhaps in the Miocene and Pliocene, as suggested by Luis Allende and colleagues in their 2001 phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA. This analysis, based on a small sample of Passer species, suggested that the saxaul sparrow is sister to Passer griseus and that the two species together are sister to Passer melanurus. A 2021 molecular phylogenetic analysis with a larger sample of species found a clade of Afrotropical Passer species, which was sister to a clade of Palearctic and Oriental species (which includes the saxaul sparrow) that diverged from each other about 5.5 million years ago.

Sandy and reddish males of two subspecies
Diagrams of the plumage of breeding males of the subspecies ammodendri (left) and stoliczkae (right)
Across its Central Asian distribution, the saxaul sparrow occurs in six probably disjunct areas, and is divided into at least three subspecies. The nominate subspecies Passer ammodendri ammodendri inhabits three of these areas, one in the Syr Darya basin of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, and another to the south of Lake Balkhash and the north of Almaty, where it is only common in the valley of the Ili River. In a third area, sometimes recognised as a subspecies korejewi, ammodendri birds breed sporadically in parts of central Turkmenistan, Iran, and possibly Afghanistan, migrating to the south during the winter. The subspecies stoliczkae was named after Ferdinand Stoliczka in 1874 by Allan Octavian Hume, from specimens Stoliczka collected in Yarkand. This subsp

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<p><span style="font-size:25px;"><a href="http://salezone.sa.com/h7FErLtB48R8ZpKu6GKzJmTu2ROvaQt7VZ2rMletyycl8wXoBw" style="color:#3db390;"><b>Claim your free patriot survival saw</b></a></span></p>
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<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:4px;">ow. J. Denis Summers-Smith considered that the Palaearctic Passer sparrows evolved about 25,000 to 15,000 years ago, during the last glacial period. During this time, sparrows would have been isolated in ice-free refugia, such as a certain steppe region in Central Asia, where Summers-Smith suggested the saxaul sparrow evolved. Genetic and fossil evidence suggest a much earlier origin for the Passer species, perhaps in the Miocene and Pliocene, as suggested by Luis Allende and colleagues in their 2001 phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA. This analysis, based on a small sample of Passer species, suggested that the saxaul sparrow is sister to Passer griseus and that the two species together are sister to Passer melanurus. A 2021 molecular phylogenetic analysis with a larger sample of species found a clade of Afrotropical Passer species, which was sister to a clade of Palearctic and Oriental species (which includes the saxaul sparrow) that diverged from each other about 5.5 million years ago. Sandy and reddish males of two subspecies Diagrams of the plumage of breeding males of the subspecies ammodendri (left) and stoliczkae (right) Across its Central Asian distribution, the saxaul sparrow occurs in six probably disjunct areas, and is divided into at least three subspecies. The nominate subspecies Passer ammodendri ammodendri inhabits three of these areas, one in the Syr Darya basin of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, and another to the south of Lake Balkhash and the north of Almaty, where it is only common in the valley of the Ili River. In a third area, sometimes recognised as a subspecies korejewi, ammodendri birds breed sporadically in parts of central Turkmenistan, Iran, and possibly Afghanistan, migrating to the south during the winter. The subspecies stoliczkae was named after Ferdinand Stoliczka in 1874 by Allan Octavian Hume, from specimens Stoliczka collected in Yarkand. This subsp</span><br />
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