Question: answer Fascinating Flight by Miles O'Brien Looking to the ground before taking to the aiwhat ground birds can teach us about flight Ken Dial is
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Fascinating Flight by Miles O'Brien Looking to the ground before taking to the aiwhat ground birds can teach us about flight Ken Dial is a veteran pilot, qualified to fly a range of jets and other aircraft. But the fliers this biologist admires most are the birds he studies at the University of Montana Bird Flight Lab. \"The 'aha' moments for me are when | realize | am looking at ten different gauges to allow me to fly nice and steady and stay coordinated. I'm doing so with the help of so many different sensors,\" says Dial. \"And, I'm just amazed at how a bird does the same thing but can actually make such extraordinary maneuvers, and keep its 'cockpit' perfectly fixed in space while its whole body is twisting around it.\" With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for more than twenty-five years, Dial and his team in Missoula, Meontana, have revealed more about the origin of flight. Many findings come with the help of sophisticated equipment, such as wind tunnels, lasers and cameras that can record 1,000 frames per second! But a lot of knowledge comes from keen observation, both inside the lab and out in the field. Soma of Nial's dicrovarias have coma frnm comnaring warinns Which statement from the text provides relevant support for the claim \"Dial and his team in Missoula, Mont., o A have revealed more about the origin of flight"? "Many findings come with the help of sophisticated equipment, such as wind tunnels, lasers and cameras that can record 1,000 frames per second!\" . "Some of Dial's discoveries have come from comparing various species of ground birds, which are often on their own from the day they hatch, with bird species that receive a lot more parental attention.\" . "Their kids are born thermally susceptible, they have to be warmed by the parents, they have to be fed by the parents, protected.\" . "They all employed the same WAIR strategy of using their wings from day one, whether pigeons or quail or parakeets.\