Wellbeing Whisper on MSN
650-foot Greenland wave made Earth hum for nine days
How does a fjord in the Arctic make the entire earth sound like a tuning-fork? The pulse’s frequency is roughly 1 beat every ...
If you turned off every video game system, car stereo, and TV on the planet, and if everyone held their breath and didn’t make a peep, there would still be a sound, though you couldn’t exactly hear it ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A NASA satellite saw a mega-tsunami behave in a bizarre way
A wall of water taller than most skyscrapers roared through a remote Greenland fjord, yet the strangest part of the story ...
The global "hum" of the Earth is now helping scientists probe the planet's deep interior, a group of researchers say. Since this hum -- called seismic noise, which is generated by sources such as ...
Far from the blaring cacophony of cities, towns and suburbs, there are far quieter soundtracks to be found -- the murmurs of wind rustling grasses, rushing waves tumbling onto beaches, the creaking of ...
Researchers in Japan and France have discovered a new way of looking inside the Earth that will no longer be hampered by “tectonic blind spots”. Exploiting a curious phenomenon known as the Earth’s ...
Strange as it may seem, the Earth’s atmosphere rings out in a chorus of frequencies just below the reach of the human ear. Although we cannot hear these “infrasonic” waves — which have frequencies ...
Some people even claim to have heard the weird sound (Credit: Getty. Shutterstock) It’s a real-life mystery of the deep which has left the experts baffled. Scientists have carried out a pioneering ...
The once-mysterious planetary hum of the Earth is getting put to use by scientists mapping the planet's interior. Ocean wave interactions, primarily along the Pacific coast of North America, generate ...
The Earth makes a mysterious humming sound, and for the first time, it has been recorded in the ocean floor. The Earth's hum, however, remains one of the world's most intriguing mysteries. While there ...
The global "hum" of the Earth is now helping scientists probe the planet's deep interior, a group of researchers say. Since this hum — called seismic noise, which is generated by sources such as storm ...
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