听写填空,只写填空内容,不抄全文,5-10句,不用写标号,注意标点,口语中因结巴等问题造成的重复单词只写一遍~

Hint:
magnetite


Today, a Swedish student asks scientist, "My name is Adam Bergner, I come from Linkoping in Sweden and my question is how are birds able to navigate?"

There are many theories, and a recent one came from Klaus Schulten, a biophysicist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. [---1,2---]

Klaus Schulten: [---3---] (有一个:)

[----4,5---] He thinks birds also utilize Earth's pervasive, global magnetic field - the one that guides our compasses.

Klaus Schulten: [---6---]

[---7---]

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【视听版科学小组荣誉出品】
He said birds usually navigate by physical landmarks, like highways or coastlines. But, in extreme weather or as they fly over oceans, they use a sort of internal compass. Many of us think that there are two senses of two compass senses in birds and other animals: one, that likely relies on magnetite, and the other one that relies on the biochemical reaction that is connected with visual system. Magnetite, a mineral with magnetic properties, is found in some birds' beaks. Schulten believes it helps birds identify strong or weak magnetic fields on Earth's surface. And that is more the general map that they need to use when they are in completely unknown territory. Schulten believes that ability comes from a light-sensing protein, located in only one eye of the bird. The protein picks up signals, based on light, to send messages to the brain about the direction of the magnetic field.