![]() ![]() Middle Agesĭuring the Viking expansion into England, the shieldmaiden Eivor Varinsdottir of the Raven Clan possessed Eagle Vision in addition to possessing a shared vision and sense with her raven, Sýnin. ![]() During her time in Atlantis, Kassandra learned to commune with the Staff of Hermes Trismegistus and fully opened herself up to the Isu's sixth sense. Īs an adult during the Peloponnesian War, Kassandra explored Aletheia's simulation of Atlantis, where she learned that her "gift" represented a limited form of the Isu's sixth sense, "knowledge". That is our family's gift." ―Myrrine to Kassandra -ĭuring the 5th century BCE, Myrrine, the daughter of Leonidas I of Sparta and the mother of the misthios Kassandra, taught her child that their family had a "gift" other people did not, describing it as an ability to "feel certain things happening around" them. "We are able to feel certain things happening around us. Some individuals also developed exotic variations of the gift one application allowing its wielder to peer into the memories of their target upon killing them, while another one allowed a gifted individual to become a kind of lie detector, knowing when someone was lying or telling the truth to them. This stage heightens all the senses of its user, allowing them to detect the heartbeat of a target in the area, or even foresee a target's path. When an individual masters Eagle Vision, the ability can evolve to the more advanced Eagle Sense. ![]() However, as Desmond Miles was-at least initially -unaware of Lucy Stillman's true affiliation with the Templar Order, it suggests the sixth sense is not entirely infallible. Red indicates enemies or spilled blood, blue indicates allies, white indicates sources of information or hiding spots, and gold indicates targets or objects of interest. Those who possess the gift are able to instinctively sense how people and objects relate to them, which manifests as a colored glow, much like an aura. Though each average human holds the potential to utilize it through intense and very long training, some rare individuals display a greater concentration of the necessary Isu genes, and thus are more likely to naturally exhibit Eagle Vision as well as some of its more advanced variations. Amongst the Isu, who naturally possessed complete access to this sixth sense, it was known simply as Knowledge. Quite a combination." ―Edward Kenway describing his Eagle Vision to Mary Read, 1716 -Īltaïr using Eagle Vision to observe William of Montferrat and his guardsĮagle Vision, also known as Odin's Sight by the Vikings is an extrasensory perception, or "sixth sense", that lies dormant within human beings as a result of interbreeding between ancient human beings and Isu. It's like using every sense at once, isn't it? To see sounds and hear shapes. © 2014 Tune In to Nature."I've seen its like before. So the next time you give the “eagle eye” to a raptor, chances are, it saw you first.īird sounds provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. That's like you driving at forty miles an hour, and being able to look back to where you were when this BirdNote started and see a jack rabbit. There, it spots the minute movement of its favorite prey, a rabbit, over a mile away. So when hunting in open country, the Golden Eagle uses its seven-foot wingspan to ride thermals high into the air. The density of rods and cones within a raptor’s eye may be five times more than in your own eye. Look at the back of your hand: your rods register the overall shape, the cones register details such as contour and color. The secret to the bird’s exceptional vision is the density of visual cells, the rods and cones of its retina. Ever used the term “eagle eye”? The eye of an eagle is one of the most sensitive in the animal kingdom, and its size can cause it to weigh more than the eagle’s brain. ![]()
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