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The flight of Etana

The flight of Etana.jpg Testing the girder-built body of an aircraftThumbnailsA pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying trackTesting the girder-built body of an aircraftThumbnailsA pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying trackTesting the girder-built body of an aircraftThumbnailsA pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying trackTesting the girder-built body of an aircraftThumbnailsA pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying trackTesting the girder-built body of an aircraftThumbnailsA pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying trackTesting the girder-built body of an aircraftThumbnailsA pylon, or mark-tower, on the flying track

Historians have unearthed stories in cuneiform writing of man’s attempts to fly. Some of these inscriptions date back more than five thousand years, to 3500 B.C. Perhaps the most famous of these stories is the ancient Babylonian tale of the shepherd boy, Etana, who rode on the back of an eagle.