Name a living organism that flies high in the sky but it dosen't have wings
Answers
Answer:
Humans have wing envy. For thousands of years, we’ve been dreaming up hare-brained schemes to fly like birds. The ancient Greeks conjured up Icarus and Daedalus, who made wings from bird feathers, strings and wax. Leonardo da Vinci put a little more thought into it, drafting plans for a mechanical winged contraption known as the ornithopter.
While 20th-century humans are perfectly capable of taking to the skies, there’s something intrinsically unsatisfying about doing so in an aluminum behemoth. We still want to fly like birds — taking off under our own power and glidingeffortlessly once we’re airborne. There’s even a $250,000 prize for the first human-powered helicopter that can stay airborne for 60 seconds, although no one has come close to achieving that objective since the initial offer was made more than 30 years ago.
Why, after at least two millennia of thoughtful engineering, are humans still trying to figure out individual flight? Why can’t we strap on a set of wings and take off? What about us is so unsuited to soaring?
Explanation:
hope it's helpful
make me brainlliest answer
Answer:
A caterpillar has no wings, but will fly when it matures and becomes a butterfly.