Tuesday, April 14, 2020

National Geographic

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They move so quick that human eyes see only a hovering area of color, a blur of wings. However when frozen in time by high-speed cameras, hummingbirds yield their secrets.
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About National Geographic:.
National Geographic is the world’s premium location for science, expedition, and experience. Through their first-rate researchers, professional photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what’s possible.

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Hummingbirds live exclusively in the Americas. The biggest, the huge hummingbird found in Peru and Chile, pointers the scales at around 20 grams. World’s smallest birds is just one of numerous distinctions that hummingbird species declare.

Read the entire National Geographic publication story on hummingbirds.
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2017/07/ hummingbird-secrets-speed-worlds-smallest-bird/

This video was based on research study done by Clark laboratory at United States Riverside, Dudley lab at UC Berkeley, and the Altshuler laboratory at the University of British Columbia.
http://animalaeroacoustics.ucr.edu/
https://berkeleyflightlab.org/
http://altshuler.zoology.ubc.ca/

The professional photographer would likewise like to thank Victor Ortega-Jimenez, Katie Johnson, Sean Wilcox, David Rankin and Nicholas Donnelly.
http://ornithopterus.com/
http://mightypixel.net/

Learn more about photographer Anand Varma and his work here.
https://www.instagram.com/anandavarma/

See Hummingbirds Fly, Shake, Consume in Incredible Slow Motion|National Geographic.
https://youtu.be/RtUQ_pz5wlo

National Geographic.
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

https://xraytechniciancertification.org/national-geographic/

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