Bogong moths are one of the only recorded animals, besides humans, to use the stars for navigation. Read here to learn how ...
Atlas Pro on MSN
How to actually navigate using the stars
Long before GPS, explorers used the stars to cross oceans and deserts. Here’s how they turned the night sky into a ...
Each spring, billions of bogong moths fill southeast Australia’s skies. Fleeing the lowlands and trying to beat the heat, they fly roughly 600 miles to caves embedded in the Australian Alps. The moths ...
(CNN) — Each year, a tiny species in Australia makes a grueling 620-mile (1,000-kilometer) nighttime migration, and it’s pulling off the feat in a way only humans and migratory birds have been known ...
A species of Australian moth travels up to a thousand kilometers every summer using the stars to navigate, scientists said Wednesday, the first time this talent has been discovered in an invertebrate ...
TWICE A YEAR the skies of south-eastern Australia fill with billions of Bogong moths. In the spring these unassuming brown critters, about an inch long, fly south from their birthplace in Queensland ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results