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Weighing less than a golf ball and merely six inches in length, the Inaccessible Island rail is the world's smallest flightless bird.
Discover the world's most amazing flightless birds—like ostriches, penguins, and emus. Learn why they can't fly and how they've adapted to thrive on land and in water.
7 fascinating flightless birds When we think of birds, flying is usually the first thing that comes to mind– wings spread wide, gliding through the sky.
Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Free Bird" has its first official music video over 50 years after its release. The 9-minute video, directed by Max Moore, tells a story of an older man reminiscing about his ...
More than 50 years after Lynyrd Skynyrd launched "Free Bird," there's finally an official music video for the rock classic.
When Paul Wittgenstein lost his arm in World War I, he convinced famous composers to write music for the left hand alone. That music is still inspiring pianists today.
Musician Phil Cook has a new album out called “Appalachia Borealis.” It's a suite of piano meditations that were inspired by and also feature bird songs. The album began with Cook improvising ...
Meet The Kagu: Rare, Flightless, And With An Unusual Feature Seen In No Other Bird This fun-looking forest-dweller spends plenty of time with its beak in the ground.
Towering up to 10 feet tall with massive beaks and terrifying speed, these giant flightless birds dominated South America for millions of years.
But make no mistake, the stars of the soon-to-be-called Kampe Bullis Farm Brewery are the flightless, yet fast ostriches. And while watering the birds, there was a commotion out front.
New Zealand hosts unique flightless, nocturnal birds, evolved in isolation and adapted to predator-free conditions, symbolizing the country's rich biodiversity.
The Galápagos rail, a small, black, ground bird, hadn’t been seen on Floreana Island in the Galápagos since 1835, when Charles Darwin first described it. That changed recently when researchers ...