In 1997, the Bloop was heard on hydrophones across the Pacific. It was a loud, ultra-low frequency sound that was heard at listening stations underwater over 5,000km apart, and one of many mysterious ...
Theories about the sound's origins included an undiscovered sea creature. By 2011, NOAA scientists concluded the sound was the cracking of an ice shelf during an icequake. In the summer of 1997, ...
Back in the late 1990s, NOAA’s Acoustic Monitoring Project recorded a series of haunting, creepy noises from deep beneath the ocean’s surface (you can hear it in the audio above). When this recording ...
Deep within the Southern Pacific waters, the eerie silence is interrupted by some strange, elusive sounds that travel through the body of the ocean. In 2002, oceanographer Christopher Fox was staring ...
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 ...
As Ireland's Dara Ó Briain once joked on YouTube, "Science knows it doesn't know everything, otherwise it'd stop." The world is full of mysteries to solve and curious subjects to study, and no part of ...
After 15 long years, scientists have finally found an explanation for the creepy undersea "bloop" noise recorded in the 1990s by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The NOAA ...
In a startling revelation that left scientists astounded, an unusual noise, now referred to as the "bloop", was detected off the coast of Florida. Initially, speculation ran wild with theories ...
In 1997, NOAA scientists recorded a haunting, strange sound in the southern Pacific Ocean's depths. Theories about the sound's origins included an undiscovered sea creature. By 2011, NOAA scientists ...