Blackbird is to use the fraud and bribery from the South Pacific Islands in particular to enslave people on board and then transport them as workers, especially to sugar cane and cotton farms in Queensland, Australia. This practice is not limited to Australia's Croutadri of Queensland, but it already happens in Peru's Tincha Archipelago. This terrible habit mainly occurred between the 1860s and 1904 years.
"Four birds" ("Four birds") mentioned in "Christmas Day 12" is known as a common cloud gull, Turdus merula, and Eurasian croutadori to distinguish it from New World Black maybe. And other local species. Common blackbirds are true thrush, massive family genius singing birds are distributed in the third scene of midnight night dreams on a global scale. "Blackbird" is now a generic term, but "ouzel" is a generic term for closely related circular ouzel Turdus torquatus, and irrelevant, but also commonly used for water ouzel. Similar white throat, Cinclus cinclus
Blackbird Hill, Nebraska State, famous for his burial, is known for its name Black Bird, the Omaha Indian Chief of the same name, as its name sits at his most precious moment. But this hill is also one of the oldest ghost stories in Nebraska. In the late nineteenth century a local man discovered that he still has feelings for his lover who his wife had been away for years. He was swallowed by his anger, stabbed his wife, picked up her body in a panic, ran on the cliffs of Mount Blackbird, and jumped. If you listen carefully on October 17th, you are told that you can hear the woman shouting near the top of the mountain.
This might be a surprise, but the life of Corntrakes is almost the same as Blackbird's lifespan. The only difference is the choice of feeding station: blackbirds are hunting outdoors; corn cracks are guerrillas. Protected by their whole body green, Corntrakes listens carefully to their body language - as long as you are lucky enough to observe it - just like a tracking slash. In order to understand how birds hear food on the ground, you need to read this short article: Montgomerie, R. Weatherhead, P. "Robins found worms", Animal Behavior, 54: 143-151. In addition, in the HOMEPLACE BIRDS (McGeehan & Wyllie, 2013) chapter titled "How Blackbirds Test Worms", this topic is explained in part on Montgomerie and Weatherhead's research.