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  2. Phorusrhacidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phorusrhacidae

    The structure of the fossils also suggest that these birds may have been swifter than originally thought. [25] A skull from a smaller subspecies of this bird was also found recently. With this fossil, it was found that the internal structure of the beak is hollow and reinforced with thin-walled trabeculae.

  3. Cassowary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassowary

    Of the attacks, 73% involved the birds expecting or snatching food, 5% involved defending their natural food sources, 15% involved defending themselves, and 7% involved defending their chicks or eggs. Only one human death was reported among those 150 attacks. [75] The first documented human death caused by a cassowary was on April 6, 1926.

  4. Ornimegalonyx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornimegalonyx

    It was a flightless or nearly flightless bird and it is believed to be the largest owl that ever existed. It lived on the island of Cuba. The first fossil specimen was mistakenly described as a bird in the family Phorusrhacidae, in part because the bones were so large.

  5. Southern cassowary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_cassowary

    The bird's owner, a 75-year-old man who had raised the animal, was apparently clawed to death after he fell to the ground. [ 15 ] Being fed by people tempts southern cassowaries into closer associations with human-inhabited areas, increasing the already high risk of vehicle strikes – a major cause of southern cassowary mortality – and ...

  6. Flightless bird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flightless_bird

    Flightless birds are birds that cannot fly, as they have, through evolution, lost the ability to. [1] There are over 60 extant species, [2] including the well-known ratites (ostriches, emus, cassowaries, rheas, and kiwis) and penguins. The smallest flightless bird is the Inaccessible Island rail (length 12.5 cm, weight 34.7

  7. How did flightless birds spread across the world? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-05-22-how-did-flightless...

    A new study from the University of Adelaide looked at the DNA of this big guy, the elephant bird, one of the biggest birds to have ever existed. It lived on Madagascar and died out sometime in the ...

  8. Phorusrhacos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phorusrhacos

    Phorusrhacos was part of the group called the Phorusrhacidae, which is an extinct group of flightless, cursorial carnivorous birds that occupied one of the dominant, large land-predator niches in South America from the lower Eocene to the Pleistocene. They dispersed into North America during the Great American Biotic Interchange (~3 Ma).

  9. List of largest birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_birds

    The common ostrich is the largest living bird Aepyornis maximus, one of the largest birds ever. The largest extant species of bird measured by mass is the common ostrich (Struthio camelus), closely followed by the Somali ostrich (Struthio molybdophanes). A male ostrich can reach a height of 2.8 metres (9.2 feet) and weigh over 156.8 kg (346 lb ...