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posted by mrpg on Sunday September 02 2018, @01:51PM   Printer-friendly
from the so-cool dept.

ScienceAlert:

The mystery behind how birds navigate might finally be solved: it's not the iron in their beaks providing a magnetic compass, but a protein in their eyes that lets them "see" Earth's magnetic fields.

These findings come courtesy of two papers - one studying robins, the other zebra finches.

The fancy eye protein is called Cry4, and it's part of a class of proteins called cryptochromes - photoreceptors sensitive to blue light, found in both plants and animals. These proteins play a role in regulating circadian rhythms.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 02 2018, @09:42PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 02 2018, @09:42PM (#729658)

    Cue augmented reality glasses. They should be able to display an overlay of magnetic fields... well before we genetically engineer new human eyes with the Cry4 protein.