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Mysterious deep-sea 'Bloop' had scientists convinced they'd finally found the giant megalodon
Nearly 30 years after it was first recorded, people are still arguing about a single sound from the deep ocean. The “Bloop,” a strange, powerful underwater noise picked up in 1997, has been folded ...
In the summer of 1997, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration picked up a sound from deep beneath the Pacific. The sound seemed to come from an animal far larger than any we’ve ever ...
Boing Boing on MSN
In 1997, NOAA recorded a sound louder than any known animal
In the summer of 1997, NOAA's underwater microphone network - a Cold War-era array of hydrophones originally built to track Soviet submarines and later repurposed to monitor earthquakes and whale ...
In 1997, Bloop was detected by U.S. Navy "spy" sensors 3,000 miles apart that had been put there to detect the movement of Soviet submarines, the magazine reports. The frequency of the sound meant it ...
The loudest underwater sound ever recorded has been a mystery for 20 years and it still hasn't got a confirmed explanation. In 1997, the United States' National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ...
IN THE summer of 1997, an array of underwater microphones, or hydrophones, owned by the US government picked up a strange sound. For a minute, it rose rapidly in frequency; then it disappeared. The ...
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