From the Radiolab podcast: How bird brains bend space and time.
Annie McEwen went to a mountain in Pennsylvania to help catch some migratory owls. Then Scott Weidensaul peeled back the owl’s feathery face disc, so that she could look at the back of its eyeball. No owls were harmed in the process, but this brief glimpse into the inner workings of a bird sent her off on a journey to a place where fleshy animal business bumps into the mathematics of subatomic particles. With help from Henrik Mouristen, we hear how one of the biggest mysteries in biology might finally find an answer in the weird world of quantum mechanics, where the classical rules of space and time are upended, and electrons dance to the beat of an enormous invisible force field that surrounds our planet.
A very special thanks to Rosy Tucker, Eric Snyder, Holly Merker and Seth Benz at the Hog Island Audubon Camp. Thank you to the owl-tagging volunteers Chris Bortz, Cassie Bortz and Cheryl Faust at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary. Thank you to Jeremy Bloom and Jim McEwen for helping with the owls. Thank you to Isabelle Andreesen at the University of Oldenburg and thank you to Andrew Farnsworth at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, as well as Nick Halmagyi and Andrew Otto. Thank you everyone!
EPISODE CREDITS:
Reported by Annie McEwen
Produced by Annie McEwen
Original music and sound design contributed by Annie McEwen
Fact-checking by Natalie Middleton
Edited by Becca Bressler
EPISODE CITATIONS:
Places:
Check out Hog Island Audubon Camp: https://hogisland.audubon.org
If you like birds, this is the place for you. The people, the food (my god the food), the views, the hiking, and especially the BIRDS are incredible.
And if it’s raptors you’re specifically interested in, I highly recommend visiting Hawk Mountain Sanctuary: www.hawkmountain.org
You can watch these amazing birds wheeling high above a stunning forested valley, if you’re into that sort of thing, and maybe if you’re lucky you’ll even catch sight of some teeny weeny owls.
Books:
Scott Weidensaul will make you love birds if you don’t already. Check out his books and go see him talk! http://www.scottweidensaul.com
Website:
If you want to learn more about the fascinating and wildly interdisciplinary field of magnetoreception in birds, you can dig into the work of Henrick Mouritsen at the University of Oldenburg and his colleagues at the University of Oxford here: https://www.quantumbirds.eu
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Photo illustration by Jared Bartman
Video by W. Harry Fortuna