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Birds

Even though we’ve only recently developed GPS systems that give us directions while we’re driving, birds have always been able to find their way during migration. Their sense of direction is dependent on a combination of three “maps” of their own.

Birds who migrate during the day can orient themselves by the position of the sun. Obviously, sunrise and sunset will indicate east and west, but even in the middle of the day they can ascertain where they are by the sun’s position in the sky.

Birds who prefer to travel at night use not only the moon, but they learn the constellations and navigate by them (just like old sailors). The fixed North Star is the most important, but all of the constellations are useful in figuring out time and location.

Finally, birds have a substance called magnetite located just above their beaks. This is a mineral that helps them determine Earth’s magnetic field, so they can navigate using true north.

Birds also have very keen eyesight and will use landmarks like mountains, rivers, even our own manmade buildings and roads to help them find their way.

[more about bird migration]

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How many bird strikes happen to airplanes?  According to the Federal Aviation Administration, there have been about 500 since the year 2000.  Out of those 500 collisions, about 166 had to make an emergency landing.  Bird strikes are estimated to cost around $600 million annually in plane damage.

[NY Daily News]

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The Smallest Bird in the World

Hummingbirds can fly backwards, and are the only group of birds able to do so. They flap their wings rapidly 15-80 times per second. The bee hummingbird is the smallest bird in the world, weighing in between 3 grams and 24 grams.
[wikipedia]

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The Sounds of an African Grey Parrot

An interesting fact about the African Grey parrot is how well they can talk and copy sounds that they hear repeated often. They are like living recorders. If they like the sound of the words being spoken they will speak these words or sounds quicker than they will others.
These parrots are well known in the [...]

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Prehistoric Flying Reptile Was Bigger Than a Car

A fossil of a toothless flying pterosaur, with a body bigger than some family cars, represents one of the largest of these extinct reptiles ever to be found and has forced the creation of a new genus, scientists announced today.
Pterosaurs ruled the skies 115 million years ago during the dinosaur age. They are often mistaken [...]

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Keen Vision of Hawks

The vision of a hawk is many times sharper than that of a human being. Their retinas contain approximately 1 million photoreceptors per square millimeter and a human retina contains about 200,000 in the same amount of space. Every photoreceptor has a nerve connecting it to the hawk’s brain. Additionally, their eyes have special magnification [...]

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The Fastest Recorded Wingbeat

“The fastest recorded wingbeat rate goes to the bee hummingbird at 80 beats per second.”
[source]

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