Comment on Which fly came first?
sbeak@sopuli.xyz 17 hours agoI meant fly as in the insect you would call a fly (the name, not the act of flying itself). Very cool that insects were the first flying thing though!
Comment on Which fly came first?
sbeak@sopuli.xyz 17 hours agoI meant fly as in the insect you would call a fly (the name, not the act of flying itself). Very cool that insects were the first flying thing though!
TheMetaleek@sh.itjust.works 16 hours ago
Yeah I understood after, hence my very fast edit to add the last sentence about flies existing only from around 245 my
sbeak@sopuli.xyz 16 hours ago
Wait a minute, do microorganisms that tracel in the air count as “flying”? Are there any microorganisms with mini “wings” that flap through the air? I remember a video where mayflies (I think that’s the name?) basically swim through the air, so I wonder how a microorganism will do…
Even if microbes don’t flap little wings, I would argue it still counts as flying as kites are described as flying and they don’t have any wings at all. You also fly in a hot air balloon, and that definitely doesn’t have any wings, it’s effectively floating in air, but we still call it flying. Therefore, microbes are the first flying thing (?)
TheMetaleek@sh.itjust.works 15 hours ago
Depends on the scale. Really tiny microorganism living in the air do not fly, as in they have no active mecanism to physically interact with their environment to move in any way. They just follow the air currents at seemingly random (the exact word is brownian), kinf of like particles of dust that you see in a ray of light. It is not defined as flying and not studied as such