http://en.epochtimes.com/n2/science-technology/taos-hum-elf-frequency-haarp-john-dawes-7074.html


Tracing the ‘Hum’ By Leonardo Vintiñi Jun 19, 2008

For years, people around the world have reported a strange sound


"I hear frequencies. I hear the sound of the constant force of energy
of electrostatic discharges. I hear other sounds within those sounds.
The pitches and the tones change, but the essence of the sounds I am
forced to endure 24/7 is pretty well defined and…becomes more
refined,” says Demetria Hardin of San Joaquin Valley, California.

“The frequencies seem to affect my body in that they seem to have the
ability to induce my heart to race, which helps induce other effects
to my body,” she continues. “Depending on the pitch level, my body can
be induced into chronic insomnia- type symptoms or induced into
chronic fatigue-type symptoms. Both seem to have some ability to
deprive me of sound sleep. I never feel like I get enough sleep.
Never. My instinct tells me it has to do with these frequencies I am
hearing.” This description is an example of what thousands of people
day after day (and night after night) seem forced to endure, living in
the shadow of a little-known annoyance known as “the Hum.”

“A diesel motor heard in the distance” is one of the definitions that
a significant number of so-called Hum sufferers describe. It is often
referred to as the “Taos Hum,” as reports from many who suffer this
constant sound come from this New Mexico city. It is a continuous and
monotonous sound, with a dull and low frequency that seems to accost
inhabitants all over the planet.

An increasing number of reports of this Hum phenomenon began in the
early 1990s, when local media told of a wave of Taos Hum sufferers.
Yet, even in the ’70s and ’80s Hum hearers from New Zealand to the
U.K. told of an incessant sound. Still others say that, for them, this
sound began as early as the 1960s.

“I have suffered with the Hum for the past 15 years but this is
nothing unusual; this problem has been causing trouble for at least 40
years,” says John Dawes in an e-mail interview. Dawes’s Web site
(http://homepages.tesco.net/~John.Dawes2/ ) is dedicated to Hum
sufferers around the world, letting them know that they are not alone.

Local Hum hearers refer to the sound specific to their city—called the
“Bristol Hum” or the “Kokomo Hum,” for example. However, instead of
the Hum being a phenomenon isolated to a few key spots as some have
believed, Dawes argues that the Hum is global but for some reason only
disturbs the peace of certain individuals, at certain hours of the
day. According to Dawes, 1–2 percent of the world’s population suffers
from this mystery noise.

Identifying the Cause
“Couldn’t this simply be auditory hallucinations or tinnitus?” ask
some individuals who try to understand a phenomenon they don’t
experience. This is doubtful since in many cases more than one member
of a household can hear the noise.
While many investigations have attempted to identify or offer a
suitable explanation for the enigmatic origin of the Hum, there is not
yet one that satisfies all. However, the consequences for sufferers
are clear: The interference of the “diesel motor” in their heads
varies from a simple bother to a genuine torture that prevents normal
tasks.

When does the Hum strike? The range of Hum-hearing seems to vary for
each person. Some of the affected hear it during the day, others hear
it only at specific times, and another group reports that the Hum can
come and go with no pattern. Yet the majority of all Hum sufferers
find that the “sound” is the biggest bother during the night, making
sleep extremely difficult.

Explanations for the strange Hum phenomenon found in regions such as
Kokomo, Indiana, have been attributed to factors of an industrial
origin. For instance, refrigeration towers at the city’s port, or the
large air compressors capable of generating high-decibel, low
frequency noise, might be transmitting sound subtly through the earth,
assaulting residential buildings

In other areas, Hum hypotheses refer to natural factors of the earth,
such as the movement of tectonic plates, electromagnetism caused by
meteorites, and electromagnetic waves produced by the interaction of
the planet’s magnetic field with solar flares.

Even so, the origins of the Hum are impossible to detect without the
most sensitive microphones, representing a true enigma for scientists
and a range of possibilities for investigators.

In November 2006, Dr. Tom Moir, an engineering professor at Massey
University’s Institute of Information and Mathematical Sciences in New
Zealand made a recording of the Hum. Using high-sensitivity, digital
recording equipment, Dr. Moir, and his colleague, Dr Fakhrul Alam,
captured the bothersome tone at a student’s home—herself a Hum
sufferer.

When news of this recording was reported, people all over the north
side of Auckland confirmed that they too were haunted by the same
monotonous sound. Like in Taos and other locations, the response was
so significant that the mysterious noise was quickly dubbed the
“Auckland Hum.”

“Wherever there is a high-voltage grid system, you can expect to find
Hum sufferers,” says Dawes describing his own theory. “The simple fact
is that through our use of electricity we are changing the environment
of the planet, which makes people ill—and not only those who hear the
noise. We may not like it but it is happening, and as more countries
join the race to become advanced, the situation can only get worse.
This is a problem that cannot be solved by individuals; it is a
problem that can only be addressed by government.” Dawes even suggests
that while the Hum is disruptive to many, it has even been responsible
for a few deaths.

One of the original candidates for a possible explanation of the Hum
was military submarine communications, such as ELF (Extremely Low
Frequency). ELF consists of a range of frequencies that are capable of
crossing land and sea in any direction.

Another explanation is high-frequency ionospheric systems erected
across the United States, Russia, or Norway, such as HAARP (High-
Frequency Active Auroral Research Program), which was first developed
in Alaska in 1993. While many have reported hearing the Hum long
before the construction of the HAARP project, perhaps its input within
the cacophony of frequencies that have entered our world in the past
few decades is just another piece in a complex aural puzzle—a puzzle
that has produced an unintentional result affecting more all the
time.

“There are millions of Hum sufferers around the world, and if they
want this problem solved they will need to stand up and be counted.
The only way forward is through their elected representatives,” says
Dawes. “Unfortunately, Joe public is under the impression that if a
subject gets an airing by the media then ‘something will be done’ but
it never is; as far as the media is concerned it is just one more
story.”

Finding Relief
For Hum sufferers, this constant companion can make life miserable.
Yet seemingly obvious solutions such as earplugs can even make the
sound worse. “It must be clearly understood that the Hum is NOT a
noise in the normal sense of the word; it is a perceived sound
generated inside the head of the sufferer,” observes Dawes on his Web
site. “Only a small percentage of people can actually ‘hear’ the Hum
but the cause undoubtedly affects the population at large. Most
sufferers start to hear the Hum at about the age of 50 with a two
thirds majority of women.”

To add further mystery to the origin of the Hum, sufferers frequently
report that certain locations in their towns, or in their homes, seem
to project the sound more acutely—inside certain buildings, in the
open air, or in distant rooms of the same house. Hum sufferers must
frequently choose the least affected place in their home to catch a
few precious hours of sleep.

“Buildings and the ground they stand on greatly effect the Hum level.
Buildings with thick stone walls and a high, pointed roof are the
worst; those with a flat roof are much better. The basement of a
multistory block is better than an isolated country cottage. Buildings
on a low level and clay are better than those on hills and bedrock,”
explains Dawes who also provides helpful dietary advice to fellow Hum
sufferers, desperate to escape the constant drone.

“It helps to spend as much time as possible outdoors, and if
practical, to sleep outdoors,” says Dawes.

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