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 ...
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 ...
This week, Londoners jumped out of their beds to what many described as “three bomb-like booms accompanied by blinding white light”. The booms affected bedrooms across northeast London on Sunday night ...
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 ...
Nobody had ever heard the sound of a meteor crashing into another planet until NASA's InSight lander recorded the seismic waves of a space rock striking Mars. On September 5, 2021, a rock hurtling ...
Was the infamous “bloop” a sea monster? Learn why this noise was a good reminder that we should keep an eye on the South Pole. In 1997, while using underwater microphones to monitor volcanic activity ...
When the Bloop was first reported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the media began to speculate that it was caused by a giant undersea creature. In 1997, the Bloop was picked up ...
This has become a time when those hungry for viewing or listening to sports competition have been forced to settle for replays, for hamburger hash and not sizzling bone-in rib eyes. Earlier this month ...
When you’re at work, sitting in front of a computer screen, there’s really nothing better than the moment a friend sends you a YouTube video. For a few minutes, life is good again. Charlie’s biting ...
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