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175 results for "acoustic anomaly" — page 2 of 9
ZB_4_14 — Acoustic Ecology: Soundscape Science and Biophonic Monitoring
Acoustic ecology — the study of the relationship between living organisms and their sonic environment — has evolved from an artistic and philosophical discipline into a quantitative ecological science with major conserva
G_4_15 — Acoustic Archaeology — How Ancient Spaces Were Designed for Sound
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is the scientific study of how ancient built environments and natural spaces shaped sound and how sound was used in ritual, communication, and performance in the past. The field co
G_1_18 — Acoustic Archaeology & Archaeoacoustics
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is the study of sound in past environments and the acoustic properties of archaeological sites, monuments, and artifacts. Emerging as a formal subdiscipline in the 1990s through th
G_1_19 — Acoustic Archaeology: Sound Mapping of Ancient Structures
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is an emerging interdisciplinary field that investigates the sonic properties of ancient structures, landscapes, and artifacts to understand how past peoples experienced and manipu
O_1_13 — South Atlantic Anomaly: Geomagnetic Weakness and Radiation Belt Gap
The South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) is the largest known weakness in Earth's magnetic field, centered over South America and the South Atlantic Ocean (roughly between Brazil and southern Africa), where the inner Van Allen r
O_1_06 — Geomagnetic Anomalies at Ancient Megalithic Sites
A small but growing body of geophysical research has documented measurable electromagnetic and geomagnetic anomalies at several ancient megalithic sites, including the Rollright Stones (Oxfordshire, England), Carnac (Bri
O_4_09 — Singing Sands, Booming Dunes, and Anomalous Desert Acoustics
Singing sands and booming dunes are natural acoustic phenomena in which sand produces audible sound — sometimes at extraordinary volume (up to 105 dB, comparable to a chainsaw at 1 m) — when disturbed by wind, avalanchin
O_4_16 — Singing Sands and Booming Dunes: Acoustic Geomorphology
Certain sand dunes and beaches worldwide produce sustained, audible tones — a phenomenon documented since antiquity and reported by travelers from Marco Polo (1295 CE, describing "singing sands" in the Taklamakan Desert)
O_3_17 — Ocean Acoustic Phenomena: The Bloop, the 52-Hz Whale, and SOFAR Channel Mysteries
The ocean produces a rich acoustic environment, and several unexplained or initially mysterious sound detections have captured scientific and public attention since the deployment of deep-ocean hydrophone arrays. [KEY FI
O_5_14 — Ocean Acoustic Anomalies: Bloop, Julia, Upsweep, and SOSUS
Since the end of the Cold War, the repurposing of the US Navy's SOSUS (Sound Surveillance System) — a network of fixed underwater hydrophone arrays originally deployed across the Atlantic and Pacific ocean floors during
T_5_16 — Psychoacoustics, Binaural Beats, and Sound-Mind Interaction
Psychoacoustics — the scientific study of how humans perceive sound — reveals that hearing is not a passive recording of air pressure changes but an active, constructive neural process shaped by attention, expectation, e
D_5_24 — Acoustic Archaeology: Sound Design in Ancient Ritual Structures
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) investigates the intentional use of sound in ancient structures — from the precisely tuned Oracle Chamber at Malta's Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum (~4000 BCE) to the resonant passage of Ne
D_5_20 — Cave Acoustics, Paleolithic Sound Art, and Ritual Soundscapes
The placement of Paleolithic cave art is not random — it correlates systematically with the acoustic properties of the caves. This was first demonstrated by Iegor Reznikoff (Université de Paris X) and Michel Dauvois (Cen
ZA_5_17 — Cymatics, Acoustic Resonance, and Sound-Matter Interaction
Cymatics — the study of visible sound and vibration patterns — reveals that acoustic energy organizes matter into geometric structures with striking regularity and beauty. The field traces to Ernst Chladni (1756–1827), t
ZB_5_23 — Bioacoustics & Animal Communication
Bioacoustics — the study of biological sound production, transmission, and reception — reveals a hidden world of communication systems of extraordinary sophistication. Humpback whale songs contain hierarchical structure
O_3_16 — Underwater Anomaly Catalog
Underwater anomalies range from confirmed submerged archaeological sites (Pavlopetri, Dwarka, Heracleion) to ambiguous geological/archaeological features (Yonaguni, Bimini Road, Baltic Sea Anomaly) to outright unexplaine
Y_5_21 — Sound Healing and Acoustic Therapy: Vibration, Resonance, and Therapeutic Sound
Sound healing encompasses a spectrum from evidence-based clinical music therapy to ancient and modern practices using specific frequencies, instruments, and resonance for therapeutic purposes. Clinical music therapy — pr
M_2_01 — Anomalous Megaliths: Nan Madol, Baalbek, and Unexplained Engineering
Several ancient megalithic sites worldwide exhibit engineering achievements that remain difficult to fully explain with our current understanding of the tools, techniques, and organizational capacity available to their b
U_1_01 — Music Theory, Harmonic Series, and the Physics of Sound
Music theory intersects physics, mathematics, and human perception in ways that have fascinated thinkers since Pythagoras first demonstrated that pleasing musical intervals correspond to simple numerical ratios on a mono
U_1_05 — Musical Instruments: Archaeology & Evolution
Musical instruments are among humanity's oldest manufactured artifacts, with bone flutes from the Swabian Jura (southern Germany) dating to ~40,000 BP — contemporary with the earliest figurative art and suggesting that m
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