TAOS HUM
The town of
Taos, in north-central New Mexico, has been home to many famous residents
including Julia Roberts, Dennis Hopper, D.H. Lawrence, Aldous Huxley and Donald
Rumsfeld. It's a small, laid-back artsy community that is also home to an unusual
mystery: a resident hum of unknown origin, the so-called "Taos Hum."
EXPLANATION
A variety of
theories have been offered as an explanation, ranging from the mundane to the
fantastic, the psychological to the paranormal. Stoned hippies, secret government
mind control experiments, underground UFO bases and everything in between have
been blamed.
The hum seems to have first been reported in the early
1990s. Joe Mullins, a professor emeritus of engineering at the University of
New Mexico, conducted research into the Taos Hum. Based on a survey of
residents, about 2 percent of the general population was believed to be
"hearers," those who claimed to detect the hum. Sensitive equipment
was set up in the homes of several of the "hearers," measuring sounds
and vibrations but after extensive testing nothing unusual was detected.
The research revealed, however, that there was not a
single identifiable Taos Hum but instead several different ones that people
reported; some describe it as whir, hum or buzz. The fact that not everyone
heard the same thing was puzzling, and suggests that they may have been
reporting subjective experiences instead of objective sounds.
MYSTERY SOUNDS
Mysterious sounds are nothing new, of course, and Taos is
not the only place plagued by unknown noises. In fact, there are dozens of
other cities, both big and small, in which some residents claim to hear
something strange.Just as there may be more than one explanation for
unidentified lights in the sky or along the skyline (including aircraft, clouds
reflecting spotlights, car headlights and so on), there may be more than one
explanation for unidentified sounds. The mysterious sounds range from a
high-pitched squeal to a low murmur to a faint rumble, and the explanations are
almost as varied as the sounds themselves.
Though some of these mysterious sounds remain
unexplained, many were eventually identified. For example, in 2012 residents in
Borneo reported hearing bizarre roaring or snoring sounds beginning very early
in the morning and lasting a few hours until dawn. It happened two days in a
row, frightening and puzzling locals. Investigation revealed that the
mysterious noises were caused by a nearby factory testing their boiler while
the plant was closed. In February 2014, a mysterious short-lived "loud
droning," "unearthly" sound like in the science fiction film
"Independence Day" was reported in the skies over Coventry, England.
It baffled residents for miles but an unseen airplane was later revealed to
have been the cause.
Some reports of unexplained sounds were later revealed to
be hoaxes. For example, a video posted to YouTube in January 2012 by a young
Canadian university student near Edmonton, Alberta, contained strange sounds
that she asked for help in explaining. The mysterious sounds video went viral,
and garnered nearly 2 million views before it was exposed as a prank. In an
interview with a local newspaper, she admitted that she made the video "to
show my friends and family how easy it was.... and how they shouldn't believe everything
they see online."
PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS
Humans live in a constant sea of background noise, most
of it unnoticed until we start paying attention to all the sounds and focusing
on them. While many people may assume that locating the source of a sound
should be easy, in practice it can be very difficult. There are hundreds of
potential sources of noises including traffic, boats, planes, insects, large
machines, wind, freight trains, mining and other industries. It's not as simple
as listening for a sound and walking toward it until you find its source.
Many researchers suggest that the answer to the Taos Hum
mystery may be found in the inner world of personal experience instead of the
outer world of factories and heavy equipment. What does your tongue taste like?
What does your nose smell like? What does your ear sound like? These are not
silly, simple questions but instead may hold part of the answer.
Even though we don't notice it, our ears sometimes create
their own noises. And because the sounds are subtle (and because most people
are constantly surrounded by sound, whether it's music, television, video
games, or just a typical noisy city life) we don't hear them until it's very
quiet or we are listening carefully. This phenomenon, called spontaneous acoustic
emissions, is different than auditory disorders such as tinnitus, which causes
a ringing in the ears. It might explain some of the "hearers"
reports.
The fact that only a tiny percentage of people claimed to
hear the Taos Hum was also puzzling; it's not that the other 98 percent of the
Taos population had poor hearing, but instead perhaps that those who heard the
hum were "super hearers" with unusually keen hearing. Or, it is also
possible that, given such a weak effect in such a few number of people (and
whose descriptions of the hum do not always match up) that the hum is merely an
auditory hallucination. Such hallucinations do not necessarily indicate any
sort of mental illness or disturbance, but may simply be the result of common
(and harmless) psychological and physiological processes. Neurologist Oliver
Sacks, for example, has written extensively on both visual and auditory
hallucinations in his books "Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the
Brain" (2007) and "Hallucinations" (2012). Some of the Taos Hum
hearers have even reported hearing it after they have moved out of the area.
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