Do you have a link to that specific wiki link about US Array
Earthscope info Trev???

  Perhaps they are re-producing waves of another sort like
 gravity waves above our heads
of something similiar crashing together.  Hmmmm

On Nov 2, 4:13 am, Trev <[email protected]> wrote:
> Qiuck post, from Wiki-
> "Colliding ocean wavesResearchers from the USArray Earthscope have
> tracked down a series of infrasonic humming noises produced by waves
> crashing together and thence into the ocean floor, off the North-West
> coast of the USA. Potentially, sound from these collisions could
> travel to many parts of the globe.[15][16][17]" [End quote]
>
> Further , the nodal character of sound waves would easily allow for
> dead spots to exist. My checks correlated my hum freq [roughly] with
> the approx size of the average bed/living room. Sub harmonics could
> also occur making absolutes unnecessary at this conceptual stage.
> In fact  any complex interaction of waves would have to produce such
> effects or be completely swamping the means of transport. ie:the more
> subtle the mechanism the more room for obscuration- hence our hum
> problem and sourcing it!
> Actually the Wiki entry is good and reports on a recent [June] hum in
> the UK.
> certainly, it treats the hum seriously and covers many angles.
>
> On Nov 1, 12:55 pm, f5obv <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Indeed, for example this morning we had a system of low pressure an
> > rain passing over the Pyrenees and the hum was very faint last night
> > and this morning, the wind direction was South, now the wind is coming
> > from a more Westernly direction, I can hear the hum more distinctly
> > right now, it makes me  think it could be coming from the Atlantic,
> > yes,  it could be the waves (that's what the scientist in Auckland
> > said, why not?) but also some sort of sound coming from the Earth
> > itself (magma movements etc.?)
> >  I can feel right now the pressure from the hum, on my left ear and
> > the noise and again, the pressure are reduced if I put a cup or a bowl
> > over my left ear, the hum is definitely not coming from my body.
> > I live here in Pau (SouthWest France) in an area where we have
> > earthquakes (right on the Pyrenees fault) and when I was younger I
> > could hear a strange noise with my left ear just a few hours before an
> > earhquake would happen so I guess my left ear must be more sensitive
> > to lower frequencies.
> > I thought the hum was coming from the fault itlsef, because when I go
> > north to Bordeaux or Paris I no longer hear the hum, but I didn't hear
> > the hum when I was in San Francisco (on the San Andreas fault which is
> > more active), just once and it was hardly noticeable.
> > When a high pressure system is blocked over my region I no longer hear
> > the hum, or it's very, very faint, so I'm convinced it must be comming
> > from the Atlantic, West from here, but strangely enough I never heard
> > it in Bordeaux which is far closer to the sea, I should hear it there
> > if ti was coming from the Atlantic ocean, shouldn't I?
> > It would be interesting if you tried to compare the intensity of the
> > hum with the weather conditions (Low pressure, high pressure systems)
> > in your area, this could help you find some possible source or I guess
> > direction from where you live. If we put in common our experiences and
> > findings, I guess we could figure out things or at least explore some
> > hypotheses or clues, what do you think? Unless of course  the hum
> > comes from different sources. The Internet is a wonderful tool, we
> > could share what we know and find out, the scientists will not take us
> > seriously, unless of course they themselves can hear it, people around
> > me have never taken me seriously when I tell them about the hum, and I
> > gave up and lived with it, until I watched a report about the hum on
> > CBS News (in 1993 I think) I realized that other people could hear it
> > too!!!!
> > All the best from the sunny Pyrenees.
> > JM
>
> > On 1 nov, 10:40, Trev <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Hi there JeanM- Good report, positive as to symptoms -and includes
> > > some directtional data which is VERY hard to get with hum due to its
> > > ubiqiutous nature.
> > > The first thing that sprang to mind, then, was what I mentioned only
> > > in my last post to Steve [Gas Pipes]- the issue of sea waves causing
> > > some kind of resonance round the world . Certainly, a large enough
> > > engine if the mechanism can be identified.
> > > This may seem a cranky poke at the problem- but I like it ,as it is
> > > BENIGN in origin and thus takes out some of the fear mongering with
> > > other possibilities -which I also don't let 'off the hook', by any
> > > means!
> > > Does this promise to solve the hum? - Doubtful [very] - but untangling
> > > cause and effect is the main function of us hum chasers...
>
> > > On Oct 30, 9:54 pm, f5obv <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Hello,
> > > > I started hearing the hum in SoutWest France (Pau) in the nineties (I
> > > > was in my early thirties), there are some cities where I never heard
> > > > it (I never, never, heard it in Paris  or in Bordeaux) I heard it very
> > > > faintly one night when I was in San Francisco CA USA during my second
> > > > stay there.
> > > > It seems that it is my left ear that hears it (sometimes it feels like
> > > > some physical pressure following the modulation of the hum inside my
> > > > left ear), if I put a cup or a bowl over my left ear it attenuates the
> > > > sound and that fact has convinced me that the source of the hum is
> > > > OUTSIDE my body and not inside, I sometimes hear it in the countryside
> > > > and in the mountains and ost of the time it  disappears when there is
> > > > a high pressure system over my region., I've become convinced over the
> > > > years that it comes from the air and sometimes it is louder when the
> > > > wind comes from the West or the SouthWest, I heard it though at night
> > > > when there was no wind at all, but a high pressure system seems to
> > > > stop it, so it could be coming from the atlantic coast which is about
> > > > 120  miles from here.
> > > > What do you think?
> > > > All the best from the sunny Pyrenees;
> > > > Jean-Marc
> > > > Ham radio call: F5OBV.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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