A Smart Raven wins Tic-tac-toe

11 days ago
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A Raven wins Tic-tac-toe

The intriguing Common Raven has accompanied people around the Northern Hemisphere for centuries, following their wagons, sleds, sleighs, and hunting parties in hopes of a quick meal. Ravens are among the smartest of all birds, gaining a reputation for solving ever more complicated problems invented by ever more creative scientists. These big, sooty birds thrive among humans and in the back of beyond, stretching across the sky on easy, flowing wingbeats and filling the empty spaces with an echoing croak.

A raven is any of several larger-bodied passerine bird species in the genus Corvus. These species do not form a single taxonomic group within the genus. There is no consistent distinction between crows and ravens. Names are assigned to different species chiefly based on their size

Common Raven or Northern Raven (Corvus corax), found in the Holarctic south throughout Middle Europe, North Africa, Western Siberia, Asia, Greenland.and North America to Nicaragua.
Western Raven (Corvus [corax] sinuatus), found in the Arctic, North America, Eurasia, Northern Africa, Pacific islands and British Isles
Brown-necked Raven or Desert Raven (Corvus ruficolis), found in Northern Africa, Arabia, Southeast to Eastern Asia
Australian Raven (Corvus coronoides), found in Eastern and Southern Australia
Little Raven (Corvus mellori), found inSoutheastern Australia
Forest Raven or Tasmanian Raven (Corvus tasmanicus ), found in Tasmania and the adjacent south coast of Australia
Relict Raven (Corvus [tasmanicus] boreus ), found in Northeastern New South Wales
Chihuahuan Raven (Corvus cryptoleucus), foundinSouthwestern U.S. and Northwestern Mexico

White-necked Raven or Cape Raven (Corvus alberculos), found in Southern, Central and Eastern Africa
Thick-billed Raven (Corvus crassirostris), found in Ethiopia
Fan-tailed Raven (Corvus rhipidurus), found in Northeast Africa, Middle East
Dwarf Raven (Corvus edithae), found in Ethiopia

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