Sujet : feathers (and one bird)
De : cates_db (at) *nospam* hotmail.com (DB Cates)
Groupes : talk.originsDate : 11. May 2024, 18:21:59
Autres entêtes
Organisation : University of Ediacara
Message-ID : <v1o9fl$5fep$1@solani.org>
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
I just started reading an article in the latest SciAm about feathers, including their evolution. The first paragraph gave me a WOW moment that i thought I would share (below). I haven't read much beyond that yet.'
"In October 2022 a bird with the code name B6 set a new world record that few people outside the field of ornithology noticed. Over the course of 11 days, B6, a young Bar-tailed Godwit, flew from its hatching ground in Alaska to its wintering ground in Tasmania, covering 8,425 miles without taking a single break. For comparison, there is only one commercial aircraft that can fly that far nonstop, a Boeing 777 with a 213-foot wingspan and one of the most powerful jet engines in the world. During its journey, B6—an animal that could perch comfortably on your shoulder—did not land, did not eat, did not drink and <i>did not stop flapping</i>, sustaining an average ground speed of 30 miles per hour 24 hours a day as it winged its way to the other end of the world.
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Don Cates ("he's a cunning rascal" PN)