Just found this online: https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/544646/why-crows-hold-noisy-funerals-their-fallen-friends
On Mar 20, 2021, at 6:59 PM, jill ippoliti wrote:
Read Bellman & Black, fiction by Diane Shetterfield and then speculate some more!On Friday, March 19, 2021 at 6:05:19 PM UTC-4 cathie...@gmail.com wrote:For several years now, near sunset in winter, we have gotten used to seeing hundreds of crows streaming over our neighborhood from the south and west, heading north to their roosts in Augusta along the Kennebec River.Earlier this week however hundreds of them dropped out of the air to converge on a few huge pine trees and an ancient ash tree in the next yard over.We have lived here almost 30 years and this has never happened.The crows sat in jumbled clots with only mutterings or brief calls. No feeding, foraging or harassment of a predator.After about 5 minutes they took off, and they haven't alighted since.There was one dead crow lying in the yard.Were they acknowledging their fallen comrade?Elephants do it; do crows?Your thoughts?Cathie Murray, Hallowell--
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