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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNAustralian Moths Are the First Known Insects to Navigate by the Stars, Revealing a Migratory SuperpowerBogong moths use both Earth's magnetic field and the starry night sky to make twice-yearly migrations spanning hundreds of ...
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The Daily Galaxy on MSNScientists Unearth 500-Million-Year-Old Creature with Three Eyes and Alien-Like FeaturesA recently discovered creature, Mosura fentoni, has stunned paleontologists with its bizarre, otherworldly features. Unveiled ...
Imagine traveling more than 600 miles from the only home you’ve ever known, to a mountain ridge you’ve never been to. It’s ...
Jannique Mulder-Slater is a 16-year-old aspiring entomologist from Bocabec, N.B., who found three rare cecropia moths in her ...
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Native to Australia, tiny Bogong moths travel hundreds of miles in an astonishing annual migration by using the starry night ...
New research finds that Australia’s endangered Bogong moths use the stars to make an epic round-trip migration through the ...
Several bird species, in addition to humans, have demonstrated they can use the stars to navigate great distances. And while ...
A new study finds an Australian moth follows the stars during its yearly migration, using the night sky as a guiding compass ...
Bogong moths use stars and Earth’s magnetic field to navigate epic migrations - revealing the first known stellar compass in ...
Meet the 'sea moth,' a three-eyed sea creature from 500 million years ago The Mosura fentoni, or "sea moth," may have used its third, median eye to detect light and move around its environment.
Native to Australia, tiny Bogong moths travel hundreds of miles in an astonishing annual migration by using the starry night sky to navigate, according to a new study.
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