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<blockquote data-quote="Purple Heron" data-source="post: 3600365" data-attributes="member: 143142"><p>Hi, Henning,</p><p>I don't think it really matters if signal strength is not uniform across an area--I think the point is that birds do not do well in an EMR environment. If I change the sentence you object to it will not change my overall conclusion: less signal, more birds; strong signal, fewer birds. I don't need a physics degree to know that Samos is losing all its birds. You are nit-picking.</p><p></p><p>Did you look at any of the articles I cite at the end of my paper? It may interest you know that the Engels paper, "Anthropogenic magnetic noise disrupts magnetic compass etc." was the cover story on Nature Magazine on 15th May 2015, that more than 500 newspapers reported it, as well as at least 20 radio stations, German and Danish TV, and it was discussed live on BBC World News on the 18th of May 2014. I think you will agree that Nature does not publish speculation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Purple Heron, post: 3600365, member: 143142"] Hi, Henning, I don't think it really matters if signal strength is not uniform across an area--I think the point is that birds do not do well in an EMR environment. If I change the sentence you object to it will not change my overall conclusion: less signal, more birds; strong signal, fewer birds. I don't need a physics degree to know that Samos is losing all its birds. You are nit-picking. Did you look at any of the articles I cite at the end of my paper? It may interest you know that the Engels paper, "Anthropogenic magnetic noise disrupts magnetic compass etc." was the cover story on Nature Magazine on 15th May 2015, that more than 500 newspapers reported it, as well as at least 20 radio stations, German and Danish TV, and it was discussed live on BBC World News on the 18th of May 2014. I think you will agree that Nature does not publish speculation. [/QUOTE]
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