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You will begin its flight attached to a plane with two fuselages – WhiteKnightTwo.
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Pterosaurs had hollow bones, large brains with well-developed optic lobes, and several crests on their bones to which flight muscles attached.
The humerus (bone of the upper arm) is short, the hand is strikingly long, and the primary flight feathers (attached to the hand) are much longer than the secondaries (attached to the forearm).
We do actually mention the importance of a "soft touch" in both our in-flight guide (attached) about the Red system and our flight teams also mention it when they explain how the system works.
The fossil's breast bone or sternum, where flight muscles attach, is more deeply keeled than other enantiornithines, implying a larger muscle and stronger flight more similar to modern birds.
Like most birds and pterosaurs, bats have a keel on the sternum, or breastbone, to which the large flight muscles attach.
Some aircraft have wings that may be adjusted in flight to attach at various angles to the fuselage; these are called variable incidence wings.
As you know if you've ever cut up a chicken, living birds (except for flightless birds like the ostrich and kiwi) have a keeled sternum to which the large, powerful flight muscles attach.
Accompanying this discussion are two lovely pencil sketches of a pink pigeon and a passenger pigeon that allow direct comparisons of their body and wing shapes, and a photograph of each species' keel bone (breast bone) where the flight muscles attach.
The secondary flight feathers are attached to the ulna, which thus directly transmits force from the flight muscles to these feathers and is therefore relatively heavier than the radius.
The primary flight feathers are attached to the carpometacarpus and digits, the number attached to each being characteristic of the various major groups of birds.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com