Almost 1,000 Birds Died in One Night From Striking a Chicago Building

At 3:40 a.m. on the morning of October 5, an unusually high number of birds—about 1.49 million—were in flight above Cook County, Illinois, where Chicago is located, according to BirdCast, an online tool that tracks bird migration. Poor weather conditions in the previous days—including heat and headwinds—had largely halted migration leading up to Wednesday.

“Birds like to fly in the fall when there is a north or a west wind, because they’re coming from areas north of us, and that gives them a literal and figurative tailwind to travel with,” Annette Prince, the director of Chicago Bird Collision Monitors, tells NPR.

On Wednesday night, however, temperatures dropped, and the wind shifted, leading a high number of birds to take flight on their journeys south. But early on Thursday, a storm system moved through the city and forced the birds to fly closer to the ground to avoid it, per the New York Times. By morning, carcasses ranging from Tennessee warblers to hermit thrushes to American woodcocks littered the ground outside the convention center.

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