You might know what a hydrothermal vent looks like: black plumes billowing from deep-sea pillars encrusted with tube worms, hairy crabs, pouting fish. But do you know what it sounds like? To the ...
In the abyss, everyone can hear you scream. Tube worms cover a sulfide chimney deep underwater in the Pacific Ocean.Credit...NOAA Supported by By Sabrina Imbler You might know what a hydrothermal vent ...
Seagrass, a marine plant that flowers underwater, has lots of environmental benefits – from storing carbon to preventing coastal erosion. This 3D habitat is often a haven for wildlife but, with so ...
Dominic McAfee receives funding from the Australian Research Council. Sean Connell receives funding from the Australian Research Council. Brittany Williams and Lachlan McLeod do not work for, consult, ...
The ocean is a noisy place, buzzing with sounds created by wildlife, weather, seasons and earthquakes. For sea animals, these sounds form their natural “soundscape”, but a new article in Science shows ...
When he came on board Kenneth Lonergan’s “Manchester by the Sea,” Jacob Ribicoff instantly saw the picture’s creative potential. The supervising sound editor, sound designer, and sound re- recording ...
Or is it the sounds of protests on city streets overlapping with traffic noise? Or meditative singing bowls played outdoors to a soundtrack of nature? All of these, it turns out. In the unusual and ...
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