The wings and feathers of most genera of owls showu nique properties that are held responsible for the silent flight of the owls. This ability to fly silently has long been of interest for engineers, with the aim to transfer the basic noise reducing mechanisms to technical applications such as blades of fans and propellers. The present paper describes acoustic and aerodynamic wind tunnel measurements on prepared bird wings of different species, among them twosilently flying species of owls, the barn owl( Tyto alba)a nd the tawnyo wl (Strix aluco). The different wings are characterized in the study as technical airfoils in terms of their acoustic and aerodynamic performance. The experiments took place in an aeroacoustic open jet wind tunnel using microphone array measurement technique and deconvolution beamforming algorithms. Simultaneously to the acoustic measurements, the aerodynamic forces of the wings were captured using asix-component balance. This study,which is acomplementary study to the approach of performing flyoverm easurements on birds flying in gliding flight, further confirms experimentally that the silent owlflight is aconsequence of the special wing and plumage adaptations of the owls and not aconsequence of their lower flight speed only.