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Bird wings can help keep birds down, not up (BREAKING)
UPI ^

Posted on 01/17/2003 6:22:48 AM PST by Dallas

MISSOULA, Mont., Jan. 16 (UPI) -- Instead of wings evolving for birds to fly with, findings released Thursday suggest primeval birds actually started flapping to stay closer to the ground.

Scientists investigating baby partridges found their little stubby wings might not help them fly at first, but flapping their wings initially helps press their feet against the ground to improve traction.

"By looking at these little ungainly creatures" as well as their chicken and turkey relatives, "you might glimpse the strategies involved in the origins of flight," lead researcher Ken Dial, vertebrate biologist at the University of Montana, told United Press International.

The evolution of bird flight has proved controversial for more than a century, with two opposing theories dividing the playing field.

One school, the so-called arboreal theory, argues flight originated with tree-dwelling creatures that developed gliding wings to soften landings. The other, cursorial, theory holds ground-dwellers evolved wings to help improve running and took off from there.

"Both models have run into an impasses despite extraordinary fossil finds," Dial explained. "There's a problem in explaining how the intermediate forms leading up to flight are selected for. How do you get an animal with little dinky wings to fly?"

Dial started looking at birds that might have possessed similar habits to their ancestors, ground-dwellers such as pheasants, quail, chickens, partridges and turkeys. "After they're born, these birds, probably like most of the dinosaurs, hit the ground running," he said. "Their eyes are open, legs are well-developed. They're not like most birds, which are raised in elevated nests parents build, which aren't really a proper model."

These birds frequently beat their stubby wings when walking and running up slopes, and Dial wanted to know why.

Experiments revealed partridges whose flight feathers had been gently plucked out at birth could not scuttle up slopes as steep as untouched birds, while partridges with feathers trimmed with scissors fared somewhere in-between.

Then Dial, along with his adolescent son now entering college, used high-speed cameras to study partridges scaling inclines. They also strapped accelerometers on the birds' backs to measure lift forces.

In findings reported in the Jan. 17 issue of the journal Science, Dial's analysis reveals the partridges "beat their wings as fast as they can, not to lift them as we thought like a wing to the heavens, but to stick them to the ground like a spoiler on a race car," he said.

Also, as the birds start running up steeper inclines, "you can see once they run up vertically, they've attained the wing movement needed for flight," Dial said. Instead of beating their wings horizontally, with flapping directed from head to tail, the wings then shift to going up and down.

Dial suggests ground-dwelling birds evolved flapping to climb slopes. "They're called ground birds, but they prefer to be up high when not feeding on the ground, to go to high vantage points, a bale of hay or a rock or tree, I guess to seek refuge from predators," he said. From there, flapping might have developed into flight.

He said he now intends to analyze the interaction of forces between birds and the ground and to study flapping runs in creatures such as ostriches.

"Dial has provided a realistic behavior actually used by ground-dwelling birds that wasn't really appreciated before," said vertebrate biomechanist Andrew Biewener, director of Harvard University's Concord Field Station in Bedford, Mass. "The fact that this shows you can obtain some benefit even in the intermediate stages of evolving a flapping airfoil is a significant contribution."

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TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crevolist
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1 posted on 01/17/2003 6:22:48 AM PST by Dallas
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To: All
Just 17 cents per day


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2 posted on 01/17/2003 6:24:31 AM PST by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Dallas
How do you get an animal with little dinky wings to fly?"

It's easy; getting it past the screeners at the airport is the hard thing. :^))

3 posted on 01/17/2003 6:29:48 AM PST by scouse
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To: Dallas
suggest primeval birds actually started flapping to stay closer to the ground.

Why? Was the air full of helium at the time?;-)

4 posted on 01/17/2003 6:35:16 AM PST by StriperSniper (Start heating the TAR, I'll go get the FEATHERS.)
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To: Dallas
"There's a problem in explaining how the intermediate forms leading up to flight are selected for. How do you get an animal with little dinky wings to fly?"

They have to run very fast. Aerodynamics 101
This from a scientist?

5 posted on 01/17/2003 6:39:19 AM PST by grobdriver
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To: grobdriver
I get it! Two legs and two flapping arms are better for climbing surfaces than are four grasping appendages. Sounds logical!
6 posted on 01/17/2003 6:47:01 AM PST by AndrewC
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To: Dallas
... flapping to stay closer to the ground.

This is a HOOT! Utter speculation yet taken seriously (by some in the media). The UPI will next, I suppose, begin reporting wings as "gravity helpers".

7 posted on 01/17/2003 6:51:12 AM PST by Phaedrus
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To: Dallas
Bird wings can help keep birds down, not up (BREAKING)

"Whitey" keeping them down.

(For the "humorly" challenged here, it's just a joke, please no flames)

8 posted on 01/17/2003 6:53:48 AM PST by Darth Dan
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To: Dallas
This is crap. What is the aerodynamic effect of a short stumpy wing? Do squatty birds with claws really have room to gain traction in this ridiculous way? Enough to justify invest in new appendages to do so? It's all ludicrous.

I think if someone plucked all my feathers out I might not run up hills as fast either.

9 posted on 01/17/2003 7:38:41 AM PST by Monti Cello
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To: Dallas
It works for Indy cars.
10 posted on 01/17/2003 7:50:35 AM PST by AdA$tra (Zoom, zoom zoom.)
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To: PatrickHenry
Crevo ping
11 posted on 01/17/2003 8:03:13 AM PST by Dementon (How do you know you can't swim until you have drowned?)
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To: grobdriver
Here's a novel thought: maybe they were designed that way by an intelligent being that designed everything else around us. Genesis 1:20-21
12 posted on 01/17/2003 8:10:21 AM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: Dallas
must be another of thoes 28 million dollar studies?? I cant wait for April 15 to help out!!!
13 posted on 01/17/2003 8:39:46 AM PST by fish hawk
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To: VadeRetro; jennyp; Junior; longshadow; *crevo_list; RadioAstronomer; Scully; Piltdown_Woman; ...
This is the first of two threads on this topic today.

[This ping list for the evolution -- not creationism -- side of evolution threads, and sometimes for other science topics. To be added (or dropped), let me know via freepmail.]

14 posted on 01/17/2003 8:51:41 AM PST by PatrickHenry (PH is really a great guy!)
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To: StriperSniper
Why? Was the air full of helium at the time?

No, the pull of the planet Saturn looming overhead kept lifting them off the ground.

15 posted on 01/17/2003 8:57:00 AM PST by Physicist
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To: PatrickHenry
I thought it looked familiar...
16 posted on 01/17/2003 9:01:29 AM PST by general_re (Why PH never gets banned - http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/589263/posts?page=21#21)
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To: Physicist
No, the pull of the planet Saturn looming overhead kept lifting them off the ground.

Shhhh! (Don't let everybody else in on the secret of how they filmed 'the Astronauts' bounding across 'the Moon' when it was really in that hanger sound stage in the desert!)

17 posted on 01/17/2003 9:04:39 AM PST by StriperSniper (Start heating the TAR, I'll go get the FEATHERS.)
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To: general_re
I had forgotten that post. Until I just now re-read it, I would have sworn that I never posted in libertarian threads.
18 posted on 01/17/2003 9:13:50 AM PST by PatrickHenry (PH is really a great guy!)
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To: PatrickHenry
I started to read that thread, but didn't make it as far as your post. My eyes started to bleed when the LP called Neal Peart a guitarist.
19 posted on 01/17/2003 9:16:18 AM PST by Physicist
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To: PatrickHenry
I either never saw it in the first place, or didn't assign much importance to it - that was more or less before I started in on the crevo threads. I just happened on it last night when I was looking over my own older posts. I've half a mind to ping some libertarians and sic 'em on you ;)
20 posted on 01/17/2003 9:29:17 AM PST by general_re (Why PH never gets banned - http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/589263/posts?page=21#21)
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