0TreeLemur Posted April 24, 2024 Report Posted April 24, 2024 Just when I was thinkin' that our petroleum powered flying machines are the pinnacle of aviation, this article gave me a reason to reconsider. It describes a satellite-logged flight of a 5-month old Bar-Tailed Godwit in Oct. 2022. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-feathers-are-one-of-evolutions-cleverest-inventions The bird was tagged as a juvenile in Alaska. Flight path shown here: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/alaska-science-center/news/juvenile-bar-tailed-godwit-b6-sets-world-record Wow! 2 1 Quote
EricJ Posted April 24, 2024 Report Posted April 24, 2024 Albatross do that, too, and fly for very long periods without stopping. Very interesting stuff. 1 Quote
Hank Posted April 24, 2024 Report Posted April 24, 2024 1 hour ago, EricJ said: Albatross do that, too, and fly for very long periods without stopping. Very interesting stuff. But albatross soar. This little guy was 4 months old, and flapped his wings for 11 days without pause! Absolutely amazing! Plus he found New Zealand. 2 Quote
DonMuncy Posted April 24, 2024 Report Posted April 24, 2024 According to my calculations, that figures out to almost 35 mph for his flight. That seems like an awfully good speed to me. Do you think that bird's genes come with proper accounting for good tailwinds. 1 1 Quote
0TreeLemur Posted April 24, 2024 Author Report Posted April 24, 2024 13 minutes ago, DonMuncy said: According to my calculations, that figures out to almost 35 mph for his flight. That seems like an awfully good speed to me. Do you think that bird's genes come with proper accounting for good tailwinds. I know! If you look at his course on the USGS page, he was blown off course after departing Alaska, or was taking advantage of favorable winds! I read that the solar powered GPS and satellite transmitter they glued to its tail feathers weighed 5 grams. He carried that too! Quote
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