Apparently, cattle and deer like to orient their body in a North-South direction

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The things you learn when following citations.

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2008/08/22/0803650105
"We demonstrate by means of simple, noninvasive methods (analysis of satellite images, field observations, and measuring “deer beds” in snow) that domestic cattle (n = 8,510 in 308 pastures) across the globe, and grazing and resting red and roe deer (n = 2,974 at 241 localities), align their body axes in roughly a north–south direction. Direct observations of roe deer revealed that animals orient their heads northward when grazing or resting. Amazingly, this ubiquitous phenomenon does not seem to have been noticed by herdsmen, ranchers, or hunters. Because wind and light conditions could be excluded as a common denominator determining the body axis orientation, magnetic alignment is the most parsimonious explanation. To test the hypothesis that cattle orient their body axes along the field lines of the Earth's magnetic field, we analyzed the body orientation of cattle from localities with high magnetic declination. Here, magnetic north was a better predictor than geographic north. This study reveals the magnetic alignment in large mammals based on statistically sufficient sample sizes. Our findings open horizons for the study of magnetoreception in general and are of potential significance for applied ethology (husbandry, animal welfare). They challenge neuroscientists and biophysics to explain the proximate mechanisms."
 

okiebryan

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this doesn't exactly surprise me. I've always thought I had a compass in my head. I can always tell where north is, even if I'm in a strange place and I was asleep while being driven there.

This really showed itself when I was working as a land surveyor.
 

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this doesn't exactly surprise me. I've always thought I had a compass in my head. I can always tell where north is, even if I'm in a strange place and I was asleep while being driven there.

This really showed itself when I was working as a land surveyor.

It's really easy to tell here in western Oklahoma. Every tree points north.
 

Parks 788

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It mentioned "deer beds". I was taught that deer, when bedding down will orientate themselves with their backs to the wind so they will smell any predators coming from behind/upwind and since facing down wind will see any danger coming from down wind. How would they bed down if there were westerly winds. Also, I thought most livestock put their azz to the cold north winds when they are blowing.
 

BadgeBunny

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It mentioned "deer beds". I was taught that deer, when bedding down will orientate themselves with their backs to the wind so they will smell any predators coming from behind/upwind and since facing down wind will see any danger coming from down wind. How would they bed down if there were westerly winds. Also, I thought most livestock put their azz to the cold north winds when they are blowing.

That's what I was always taught. My grandpa had a dairy and he always knew when a storm was coming -- His herd would "back up" to the direction it was coming from ...
 

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