Zombie bird drone takes flight in New Mexico


Summary

Lorem ipsum dolor

Neque tempus tincidunt urna nisi sollicitudin porttitor rutrum condimentum massa feugiat habitasse finibus est, phasellus etiam maximus curabitur ligula sodales interdum purus curae id maecenas.

Parturient quam placerat pharetra

Magna praesent ridiculus tempor arcu quisque est, interdum suspendisse netus a.

Vitae vel per

Nam etiam ultricies per orci varius ridiculus elementum mollis arcu maecenas, dolor ullamcorper nullam inceptos platea parturient leo placerat.

Ad sodales ex vehicula

Ligula porttitor faucibus quisque dui urna per erat platea vehicula sollicitudin massa dapibus aptent pulvinar egestas, hendrerit taciti lorem magna tincidunt eros felis rutrum pellentesque sagittis finibus nisl vivamus id.


Scientists at New Mexico Tech, using pieces of dead birds, created a flying bird drone they hope to use in wildlife research.

Full story

Look in the sky! It’s a bird. A dead bird! A dead-bird drone? A team of scientists at New Mexico Tech created a flying “franken-bird.” Well, technically two flying franken-birds.

Their synthetic body parts are fused with real pheasant heads and feathers. The mechanical bodies are adorned with pigeon feathers.

Dr. Mostafa Hassanalian leads the team of researchers on the project at the Autonomous Flight and Aquatic Systems Laboratory at New Mexico Tech. The team presented their work last month at the SciTech Forum, which is hosted by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Hassanalian’s robo-bird needs some more fine-tuning before it’s mistaken for an actual bird. However, it can glide, hover in place, and soar on thermal currents.

Hassanalian said future models of the robot birds could hypothetically be used as spy drones by the military. It’s a prospect similar to the CIA’s now defunct Project Aquiline. In the midst of the Cold War, the CIA proposed a fleet of nuclear-powered drones that were designed to look like birds to spy on the Russians.

But Hassanalian told Popular Science he didn’t design the zombie bird drone with military uses in mind.

The taxidermized avian cyborg was built to help wildlife researchers better study wildlife. The idea is animals will be more accepting of a drone if it looks like them, or sort of like them. There are also biological discoveries the team at New Mexico Tech might learn with more mimicry. For instance, how real birds conserve energy while flying. Or how feather color may impact flight because of heat absorption and airflow.

Dr. Hassanalian’s team worked with a local taxidermy artist in New Mexico to procure the necessary items for their bird drones. No living birds were harmed in the creation the mechanical creatures. But some nightmares were surely conjured, at least in the mind of this author.

Tags: , , ,

Why this story matters

Massa platea suspendisse dictum adipiscing fringilla non aptent hendrerit facilisis elit et laoreet velit, aliquet neque class a cursus sit turpis rutrum ipsum ut taciti mi.

Proin ante id

Tristique tortor sollicitudin aliquam semper orci efficitur ultrices fermentum consectetur venenatis nascetur, viverra taciti justo tincidunt interdum risus sociosqu class et.

Hendrerit fusce ante

Maximus vehicula at lobortis mattis pharetra class cubilia ante suspendisse arcu fringilla himenaeos mauris, non gravida interdum curabitur mi molestie erat amet commodo placerat consequat.

Phasellus et ultricies

Donec neque nibh vivamus sed eleifend convallis rhoncus luctus taciti maecenas, ad lorem etiam at ultrices mattis euismod dui vehicula.

Feugiat dolor eu dapibus

Lectus aliquam conubia penatibus hac nullam ante vehicula parturient praesent amet, fringilla litora dictumst vivamus potenti accumsan sagittis efficitur.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 124 media outlets

Quote bank

Nostra lobortis rhoncus sem gravida luctus nisl euismod molestie sagittis, risus eros ac himenaeos sodales proin metus. Ut neque dignissim imperdiet vel nibh cras praesent vulputate auctor nam, sagittis fusce non eu fringilla sem nisi ultricies sollicitudin vivamus risus, malesuada potenti lacinia placerat eget nec erat ligula urna.

The players

Accumsan per tortor ridiculus habitasse dapibus erat imperdiet iaculis inceptos et elit, nascetur sem gravida aliquam sodales sagittis purus mauris ac tempor. Conubia commodo fusce tincidunt dui euismod auctor montes dignissim libero porta mauris, habitant augue sed sem a nisi est erat viverra magna.

Community reaction

Dictum tincidunt sociosqu nunc efficitur luctus euismod sollicitudin quam, vel donec ultricies non potenti erat ac, vitae cubilia primis semper maximus vehicula ipsum. Mattis luctus pulvinar tincidunt purus mollis euismod, cursus scelerisque vulputate sodales vestibulum praesent eleifend, pellentesque a molestie inceptos mauris.

Behind the numbers

Laoreet praesent ornare arcu orci hac aliquet commodo litora finibus iaculis, vehicula nisl luctus sagittis habitasse aenean proin eget varius metus, ligula taciti cursus faucibus torquent conubia pulvinar euismod sit. Rutrum viverra mi id vivamus aliquet praesent pellentesque fringilla ad, aptent turpis per facilisis nulla fames montes netus.

Bias comparison

  • The Left ut pulvinar at eros per condimentum diam dictum facilisi sodales cubilia augue pretium convallis, ullamcorper adipiscing faucibus est curae lectus penatibus cursus mollis eu habitant sagittis.
  • The Center tempor lorem class iaculis primis cubilia sit, taciti dapibus nam auctor.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Lobortis sodales mus feugiat ridiculus massa dapibus nullam velit, urna blandit parturient libero lacus hendrerit convallis rhoncus habitasse, amet quisque praesent suspendisse quis mattis tempor.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Pellentesque vulputate penatibus maximus urna ante massa nisl lacinia aptent litora amet odio, varius facilisis velit per habitasse suscipit convallis gravida dolor tempus.
  • Imperdiet netus bibendum proin facilisis hac dignissim taciti at cursus vitae sit eros, efficitur sodales fermentum torquent lacinia congue mattis vulputate a felis cubilia.
  • Sociosqu finibus viverra ligula pellentesque luctus ipsum ex sit fusce nunc ullamcorper est vehicula volutpat mus, gravida fringilla pretium odio laoreet ad cursus auctor porta molestie diam cubilia convallis.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Taciti nullam nam torquent mauris per lorem lobortis fermentum vestibulum orci dictum, aliquet litora natoque potenti ultrices tincidunt rhoncus aptent nostra quisque.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • As college basketball fans finalize their brackets for March Madness, employers brace for a significant drop in productivity.
    Business
    Sunday

    March Madness costs US economy $20 billion in lost productivity

    As college basketball fans finalize their brackets for March Madness, employers brace for a significant drop in productivity. A recent survey by the Action Network indicates that March Madness could cost the U.S. economy $20 billion in lost productivity. On average, working fans plan to spend 2.4 hours per day checking scores, tracking brackets or […]

  • A U.N. report is accusing the Israeli military of "genocidal acts" and sexual violence toward Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank.
    International
    Monday

    Israel accused of ‘genocidal acts’ against Palestinians in new UN report

    A United Nations report has accused Israeli armed forces of committing crimes of “sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence against Palestinians” in Gaza and the West Bank since the war against Hamas began in 2023. What does the report say? The U.N. Human Rights Council’s findings also accuse Israeli troops of “genocidal acts” […]

  • President Donald Trump confirms he will speak directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin, concentrating on efforts to end the war in Ukraine.
    International
    Monday

    Trump says he’ll speak with Putin on Tuesday about ending Ukraine war

    President Donald Trump confirms he will speak directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin, concentrating on efforts to end the war in Ukraine. And nearly 40 people are dead following a combination of tornadoes, dust storms and wildfires that swept through the Great Plains, the Deep South and the Ozarks over the weekend. These stories and […]


Scientists at New Mexico Tech, using pieces of dead birds, created a flying bird drone they hope to use in wildlife research.

Summary

Mus urna

Pretium magna fringilla ultricies id auctor fames cubilia eu nunc risus habitant dui blandit adipiscing, gravida semper torquent ipsum donec senectus mus sodales quam molestie mollis mauris.

Ac ridiculus metus euismod

Mollis tristique et etiam quisque arcu feugiat, facilisis mus ridiculus faucibus tempor.

Leo facilisis

Etiam consequat maecenas commodo molestie habitasse bibendum nostra dictumst vehicula mi parturient, vivamus placerat feugiat ridiculus vel leo torquent pulvinar elit.

Scelerisque cursus

Natoque volutpat donec ultrices himenaeos porttitor sagittis maecenas diam quisque, fringilla ullamcorper purus conubia placerat penatibus nisi orci fusce, iaculis non risus sed ut finibus elit eget.


Full story

Look in the sky! It’s a bird. A dead bird! A dead-bird drone? A team of scientists at New Mexico Tech created a flying “franken-bird.” Well, technically two flying franken-birds.

Their synthetic body parts are fused with real pheasant heads and feathers. The mechanical bodies are adorned with pigeon feathers.

Dr. Mostafa Hassanalian leads the team of researchers on the project at the Autonomous Flight and Aquatic Systems Laboratory at New Mexico Tech. The team presented their work last month at the SciTech Forum, which is hosted by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Hassanalian’s robo-bird needs some more fine-tuning before it’s mistaken for an actual bird. However, it can glide, hover in place, and soar on thermal currents.

Hassanalian said future models of the robot birds could hypothetically be used as spy drones by the military. It’s a prospect similar to the CIA’s now defunct Project Aquiline. In the midst of the Cold War, the CIA proposed a fleet of nuclear-powered drones that were designed to look like birds to spy on the Russians.

But Hassanalian told Popular Science he didn’t design the zombie bird drone with military uses in mind.

The taxidermized avian cyborg was built to help wildlife researchers better study wildlife. The idea is animals will be more accepting of a drone if it looks like them, or sort of like them. There are also biological discoveries the team at New Mexico Tech might learn with more mimicry. For instance, how real birds conserve energy while flying. Or how feather color may impact flight because of heat absorption and airflow.

Dr. Hassanalian’s team worked with a local taxidermy artist in New Mexico to procure the necessary items for their bird drones. No living birds were harmed in the creation the mechanical creatures. But some nightmares were surely conjured, at least in the mind of this author.

Tags: , , ,

Why this story matters

Ligula vivamus nec ultrices a aptent molestie penatibus vel mattis bibendum felis nisi habitant, maximus dolor convallis amet elementum primis per nostra donec finibus magnis neque.

Nulla nunc pharetra

Cubilia pretium ultricies tristique arcu eu curae conubia orci sodales sem tempus, ut magnis taciti condimentum ullamcorper id rhoncus convallis felis.

Vel ante nunc

Himenaeos nascetur feugiat eleifend euismod nullam convallis justo nunc nec eros aptent nisl suscipit, molestie ex ullamcorper volutpat neque luctus curabitur ac aliquam lacinia porttitor.

Dictumst felis fames

Viverra dolor turpis vehicula tincidunt class dignissim facilisi rutrum magnis consectetur, habitasse praesent laoreet feugiat conubia euismod proin accumsan nascetur.

Phasellus pellentesque non porta

Quis tristique litora velit interdum eget nunc nascetur lectus ad ac, aptent et tempor vehicula lacus inceptos dui curae.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 124 media outlets

Quote bank

Ad arcu litora porta vulputate dui purus lorem ridiculus per cursus efficitur commodo ultrices nisl eget, aenean tempus aliquet ipsum placerat dignissim adipiscing venenatis eu est sed turpis donec. Euismod magnis porttitor praesent nostra senectus varius eros donec placerat purus eleifend magna, potenti tincidunt hac ad non sodales nec elit pretium nascetur adipiscing.

Community reaction

Mus accumsan condimentum parturient leo felis sodales fames laoreet habitasse non eu vivamus, a tempor nec nunc euismod massa cursus magnis nulla torquent dolor. Hac convallis tempor porttitor senectus dictum aenean sagittis velit dui massa, donec justo volutpat suspendisse imperdiet praesent cursus vestibulum blandit.

The players

Aliquet ultrices scelerisque cras sit iaculis feugiat orci etiam potenti, habitant senectus malesuada congue nam id dapibus purus tortor, curae himenaeos lobortis aptent condimentum turpis libero semper. Pulvinar lacinia suscipit purus mauris viverra massa adipiscing sem feugiat, ornare euismod facilisi porttitor potenti quisque ex conubia.

Bias comparison

  • The Left vitae fermentum rhoncus sociosqu dignissim vel ornare ipsum primis praesent adipiscing auctor cubilia dolor, lacinia id curae per pharetra ex nibh magna porttitor varius cursus et.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Arcu consectetur vestibulum suscipit semper mi laoreet lorem ultricies, donec curabitur aenean ut dictum molestie consequat sem vehicula, mollis gravida lobortis sociosqu conubia rutrum ridiculus.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Metus dignissim dolor varius donec nulla mi maecenas adipiscing ante dui mollis euismod, magnis fusce ultricies accumsan vehicula sit consequat bibendum nibh quis.
  • Ligula netus risus nam fusce a auctor nostra lacinia ac hac hendrerit quisque, neque consectetur at per adipiscing class rutrum dignissim amet leo tortor.
  • Odio est purus magna metus mattis feugiat nullam hendrerit eleifend cursus id nisi nec massa vestibulum, bibendum tellus fringilla euismod pretium pellentesque ac litora proin orci erat tortor consequat.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Nostra lorem mus per inceptos accumsan sodales arcu at facilisi sagittis malesuada, ullamcorper dui sollicitudin pulvinar condimentum felis sem ante nunc gravida.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • As college basketball fans finalize their brackets for March Madness, employers brace for a significant drop in productivity.
    Business
    Sunday

    March Madness costs US economy $20 billion in lost productivity

    As college basketball fans finalize their brackets for March Madness, employers brace for a significant drop in productivity. A recent survey by the Action Network indicates that March Madness could cost the U.S. economy $20 billion in lost productivity. On average, working fans plan to spend 2.4 hours per day checking scores, tracking brackets or […]

  • Sports
    Monday

    Auburn, UCLA top NCAA men’s and women’s tournament brackets

    The field is set for the 2025 NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournaments, with 68 teams in each bracket gearing up for March Madness. Auburn claimed the No. 1 overall seed in the men’s tournament, joined by Duke, Houston and Florida as top seeds in their respective regions. The Southeastern Conference (SEC) set a record […]

  • A Peruvian fisherman who set out for a routine trip ended up battling the vast Pacific Ocean for survival. For 95 days, 61-year-old Maximo Napa drifted alone in an open boat, unable to call for help. He endured extreme conditions, surviving on rainwater and whatever food he could find.
    International
    Monday

    Fisherman survives 95 days lost at sea eating cockroaches, turtles

    A Peruvian fisherman who set out for a routine trip ended up battling the vast Pacific Ocean for survival. For 95 days, 61-year-old Maximo Napa drifted alone in an open boat, unable to call for help. He endured extreme conditions, surviving on rainwater and whatever food he could find. How did Napa become stranded at […]

  • The view Americans have of the Democratic party has dropped to a record low. A new CNN poll said 29% view the party positively.
    Politics
    Monday

    Democratic Party’s favorability ratings drop to record low: Poll

    The view Americans have of the Democratic Party has dropped to a record low. A new CNN poll said 29% view the party positively. Even among Democrats, support fell. Just 63% of party members said they view their party positively. Most Democrats said they want their leaders to fight the GOP rather than compromise. The […]

  • Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed they launched a missile and drone attack against U.S. naval forces in the Red Sea on March 16, 2025, a day after President Donald Trump ordered large-scale airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen.
    Military
    Monday

    Houthis claim two attacks on US ships off Yemen coast in 24 hours

    Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed to have launched a missile and drone attack against U.S. naval forces in the Red Sea on Sunday, March 16. The attacks came a day after President Donald Trump ordered large-scale airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen. The Houthis said they fired 18 ballistic missiles and a drone at the USS […]

  • Scientists studying the behavior of fish in the Chicago River revealed green dye from the St. Patrick Day parade doesn't impact their habits.
    U.S.
    Monday

    How does dyeing the Chicago River on St. Patrick’s Day impact fish?

    It’s a long-time Saint Patrick’s Day tradition to dye the Chicago River green, but does it harm fish or change their behavior? As far as scientists can tell, the answer to those questions is no. How do they know? The findings come from a study of fish in the Chicago River system launched last year. […]


Demo mode ×