News

This is exactly what occurred when a peculiar "bloop" sound was detected in the Pacific Ocean in 1997. After years of ...
Dive into one of the ocean’s most intriguing and mysterious phenomena, the Bloop. Recorded in the 1990s by NOAA, the Bloop is an ultra-low-frequency underwater sound that baffled scientists and ...
The sound, which lasted for about one minute, was one of the loudest underwater sounds ever recorded. Below, you can listen to the bloop sped up 16 times: Paola Alexandra Rosa · Bloop, a ...
Almost a decade of research after the Bloop was heard, the NOAA declared in 2005 that the sound appeared to have been an icequake. Specifically, the creation of an iceberg.
Dubbed The Bloop, they were picked up by the SOSUS (Sound Surveillance System), an array of hydrophones (underwater devices that convert sound into electricity, much like a microphone does in the air) ...
Bloop is the big kahuna in unexplained sounds. In 1997 (a big year for auditory ocean mysteries), an extremely powerful, ultra-low-frequency sound was detected at various listening stations ...
NASA shared the sound of a meteor falling to Mars, with photos of the impact craters, on Monday. The dwindling InSight lander has captured the acoustic and seismic noise of four meteor impacts.