/user/dologin/?next=/p/UIM65uLaec/
AnonymousUser
[{"fields": {"is_featured": false, "dir_size": 1218, "igdata": "\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n", "overdue_email_after": false, "fail_retake": false, "keywords": "", "fail_action": "", "notification_email": false, "access_token_redemption_count": 0, "completion_type": "", "title": "Birds fly from Alaska to New Zealand nonstop", "overdue_email_after_text": null, "encoded_id": "UIM65uLaec", "is_viewed": true, "overdue_days_email": false, "parent_id": null, "private_views": 0, "fail_email_text": null, "status": "active", "sharing": "public", "description": "The bar-tailed godwit, a plump shore bird, has blown the record for\r\nnonstop, muscle-powered flight right out of the sky. A study being\r\npublished today reports that godwits can fly up to 7,242 miles nonstop\r\nin their annual fall migration from Alaska to New Zealand. The previous\r\nrecord, set by eastern curlews, was 4,000 miles from eastern Australia\r\nto China. The godwits flew for five to nine days, tracked by satellite.\r\nThe birds weigh no more than 1.5 pounds when they leave. Half of that\r\nis fat, which they burn off completely during the flight. The route\r\nthey take is the shortest and safest to fly. \u00e2\u20ac\u201d The Washington Post.", "tags": [721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728], "price": "0.00", "invite_message": null, "allow_score_reset": true, "igtype": "ignitable", "pass_email_text": null, "fail_popup_text": null, "podcast": false, "public_views": 9698, "notification_email_text": null, "categories": [1], "overdue_days_email_text": null, "pass_action": "", "notification_days_before": null, "access_token": null, "pass_popup_text": null, "pass_level": 0, "author": 870, "completion_date": null, "overdue_summary": false, "fail_retake_auto": false, "avgrating": "5.0", "directory": "ND2AwiScIh", "date_created": "2008-10-23T13:57:36Z", "access_token_limit": 0}, "model": "Content.ignitable", "pk": 742}]
None