Strange SOUNDS and LIGHTS in SKY - Mystery Booms EVERYWHERE

Toroid

Founding Member
Mystery hum in Highland Park.
Highland Park mystery sound returns in the dark of night to haunt sleep
The mystery sound in the Highland Park neighborhood has resurfaced — but despite some late-night acoustic sleuthing, the source remains elusive.

Three weeks ago, the Democrat and Chroniclefirst called attention to the droning sound that’s annoyed Highland Park neighbors off and on for a year. Some say it’s kept them from sleeping; others have resorted to music or white noise to block it out.

Residents have hunted in vain for the sound's point of origin. The D&C enlisted Ming-Lun Lee, an assistant professor in the Audio and Music Engineering Program at the University of Rochester, to analyze the sound and help track its source.

It was Lee who raced to the Highland Park neighborhood twice about 10 days ago, once at 11 p.m. and once at 3 a.m., after a resident reported hearing the drone.

But Lee wasn't able to detect the sound when he arrived in the neighborhood, microphone and recorder in hand.

"I didn’t get a chance to listen to that hum," Lee said later. "I really hope I can hear that hum in person soon."

The Democrat and Chronicle mapped the location of nearly two dozen people who have said they’ve heard the droning sound, which some liken to a gas-powered leaf blower and others to the hum of a portable diesel generator.

Most of the self-reported hearers live in the middle of the Highland Park neighborhood, though several live farther afield. There is no way to be certain all of them are hearing the same sound.

Some say they only detected it once or twice. Others say they hear it all the time. Many of them have posted about the sound on the neighborhood Facebook page.

No one had reported hearing the sound for about a month until the man emailed Lee after he read the D&C's original story. "It has been affecting my sleep and a friend of mine showed me the article when I was complaining about it," he wrote.


The man, who told a reporter he didn't want his name publicized, explained to Lee that he picks up the sound frequently but only in what used to be his bedroom. He now sleeps elsewhere in his home.

Lee has analyzed three separate recordings of the sound made in the city neighborhood. He found the same tone, with a frequency of 315 to 320 hertz, in all three recordings.

The man told Lee that the sound he heard seemed the same as the one in the recordings.

The tone is somewhat higher in pitch than the Hum sound that is known worldwide and heard by at least a few people in the Rochester region.

Lee also has analyzed more than a dozen recordings of suspected sources of the sound, some of them reported by residents in the wake of the first D&C story. They include two small power plants, several heating-air conditioning plants, a pump station and even a malfunctioning street lamp.
 

Toroid

Founding Member
Could these be tests of new technology the public doesn't know about yet?...Not saying government but could be a product development Corp testing something...Is that possible?...

...
The sounds could be coming from ships that are cloaked or out of phase. Drunvalo wrote/said Earth is of great interest to other races because of the Sirian Experiment of 1972 and the planet is essentially a super star. In post one it said the source remains elusive. I'm thinking the sounds could be coming from adjacent realms/dimensions. In a YT video from years ago there was a sound like a blacksmith hammering on metal. I suspect the planet's magnetic field is playing old events that are recorded in the soil and rock.

The Sirian Experiment of 1972 is at the end of the article.
Drunvalo: Our History & the 1972 Sirian Experiment
 

humanoidlord

ce3 researcher
this phenomena seems to be heavily related to meteors
the fun part?
john keel said that many meteors aren't really rocks from outer space.....
 

nivek

As Above So Below
 

nivek

As Above So Below
In southern Ohio...

 

nivek

As Above So Below
 

nivek

As Above So Below
 
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