Otto, ET all, for starting to show us the way by your observations of nature's designs.
However, its not that simple. For starters, a regular human is significantly more heavy than any bird. Weight matters in this case. There is a reason why elephants cannot jump.
If the earth had no birds or insects for us to see flying, we certainly would not be flying now.
Well, there would still be bats, flying squirrels, flying snakes and flying fish
Without competition from birds the bats probably would have evolved into much greater diversity both in size and style to take advantage of the vacated ecological niches. Along the same line, the earth would still be roamed by pterosaurs if birds had not outperformed them with their more versatile feathers. According to recent finds of palaeontology, many two legged dinosaurs had feathers. Several lines are believed to be capable of flying. All of today’s birds descended from just one of them, the Aves class. If it wasn't for Aves, one of the others would most likely have taken the sky.
Maybe a 1000 years from now, when someone discovered flight by accident. Maybe not.
Hang gliding sort of evolved from kites behind motor boots. Apparently, nature did not find kites useful (yet). BTW, balloons and zeppelins have no obvious analogue in nature, either. Given the many uses the military has for anything that lifts and can attack from above, I'd expect human flight to have been developed in the first half of the century no matter what.
BTW - I'm glad to be flying again! Been rooted to earth way too long.
Congrats!
---<)kaimartin(>---