A case for X-Files:
The World Hum database shows incidents and reports of the mysterious
humming noise are increasing throughout North America and nobody knows
what’s causing it.
July 2014 – PARANORMAL–
Some Hum investigators like University of Oklahoma geophysicist David
Deming suspect that there’s a global source responsible for the Hum
worldwide.
“It’s a very, very low wavelength noise, perhaps between 50
or 56 Hz,” Moir told Mic. “And it’s extremely difficult to stop
infrasound because it can have a wavelength of up to 10 meters, and
you’d need around 2.5 meter thick walls, built with normal materials, to
keep it out. It gets into our wooden houses very easily.
And part of
the reason people have so much trouble identifying the source of it is
because of how low frequency the Hum is: It literally moves right
through your head before you can figure out which ear picked it up
first.” Deming’s research, considered close to authoritative in the Hum
community, suggests that evidence of the Hum corresponds with an
accidental, biological consequence of the “Take Charge and Move Out”
(TACAMO) system adopted by the US Navy in the 1960s as a way for
military leaders to maintain communications with the nation’s ballistic
missile submarines, land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, and
long-range bombers during a nuclear war. As part of TACAMO, military
aircraft use VLF radio waves to send instructions to submarines: Because
of their large wavelengths, VLF can diffract around large obstacles
like mountains and buildings, propagate around the globe using the
Earth’s ionosphere and penetrate seawater to a depth of almost 40
meters, making them ideal for one-way communication with subs. And VLF,
like other low-frequency electromagnetic waves, have been shown to have a
direct impact on biological functions. (Strategic Communications Wing
One at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma, which is responsible for the
manning, training and equipping of aircraft utilized as part of the
TACAMO system, did not respond to requests for comment.)
Scientific data and anecdotal
experiences of the Hum vary so much from region the world that it’s
still unclear whether VLF and ELF waves are the source of it, let alone a
catalyst for mass murder. The idea of a mysterious noise driving people
to suicide has given birth to all kinds of pseudoscientific conjecture,
making the phenomenon a favorite for conspiracy junkies who suspect
foul play by some malicious government scheme (or UFOs, obviously). The
World Hum, a site devoted to exploring the “mysterious phenomenon being
heard by thousands around the world,” is riddled with byzantine entries
about UFOs crashing in Siberia. Dr. Glen MacPherson, a lecturer at the
University of British Columbia, knows how insane it sounds. “There’s a
terrible irony to the vision of a conspiracy nut in a tinfoil hat,
trying to keep the government from beaming thoughts into their heads,”
laughs MacPhearson, “since aluminum does protect against some
electromagnetic radiation. This is why you don’t put that stuff in the
microwave.”
The federally funded investigation into
the Windsor Hum and the serious examination of Kohlhase’s research by
Connecticut authorities may serve as a beacon of hope for Hum
investigators like MacPherson, Moir, Novak and Kohlhase. State-funded
tests on Hum-affected regions may yield data that could lead to a
real-world solution, rather than conspiracy theories. Until then,
developing a unified picture of the Hum is exactly what MacPherson wants
to accomplish in British Columbia. By providing one destination for Hum
data and testimony, he’s hoping that professional and independent
researchers will use the collected data to help develop and execute
experiments that could help identify the source of their local Hum. But
until someone funds and conducts rigorous tests in an affected region,
says Moir, people will continue to use the Hum as an excuse to blame
modern technology, from mobile phones to telecom towers to the digital
radio bands used by law enforcement. And that aura of pseudoscientific
insanity surrounding the Hum has made the job of independent researchers
more challenging. “In the past, I’ve contacted my representatives, I’ve
contacted my governor,” says Kohlhase. “There’s willful ignorance going
on about this problem and the real consequences it has.”
But should researchers like MacPherson
and Moir finally pinpoint the local sources of the pain-inducing
phenomenon, the Hum may transition from unexplained mystery to
unfortunate byproduct of modernity, a fixture of human geography like
light pollution. In the meantime, many just want to identify some
relief. “A lot of serious researchers don’t want to have their name
attached to that, but I’m not a formal academic researcher, and I’m
quite willing to lend some credibility to this idea if I can,” says
MacPherson. “This phenomenon is real and many people are suffering: I’m
just trying to do the best I can to help.” -MIC
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