Magnetoreception
Birds can detect Earth's magnetic field inclination - the angle at which field lines enter the Earth - to find north/south.
Animal Behavior
A bar-tailed godwit takes off from Alaska and flies nonstop - no food, no water, no rest - for 11,000 kilometers to New Zealand, arriving within days of the same date every year. Without GPS, without a map, without anyone to follow - how do animals find the same precise locations year after year across half the globe? Imagine possessing an internal compass that shows Earth's magnetic field, a celestial clock calibrated to the sun's arc, a star map that updates with the seasons, and a chemical memory of your exact birthplace - all running simultaneously in a brain smaller than a walnut.
Migratory animals use multiple overlapping navigation systems simultaneously. The most widespread is magnetoreception - detecting Earth's magnetic field. Birds sense magnetic field inclination through cryptochrome proteins in the eye (possibly seeing the field as a visual overlay) or through magnetite crystals in beak tissue. They also use a sun compass (calibrated against their internal circadian clock), a star compass (for nocturnal migrants), olfactory cues (especially salmon returning to natal streams), and visual landmarks. No single sense is relied upon exclusively - animals use redundant systems and switch between them as conditions change.

Magnetoreception
Birds can detect Earth's magnetic field inclination - the angle at which field lines enter the Earth - to find north/south.
Quantum compass
Birds may use quantum entanglement in their eyes to 'see' magnetic fields - a phenomenon called the radical pair mechanism.
Salmon smell
Salmon imprint on their natal stream's chemical signature as hatchlings and follow it home years later from the open ocean.
Myth: Animals follow older individuals
Many first-year animals migrate alone and navigate successfully with no guide - routes are genetically encoded.
Myth: Birds use magnetic field like a compass needle
Birds use inclination (dip angle), not polarity, so they are not confused by field reversals.
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