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Miss Cellania
Mother Nature’s Music
by Miss Cellania - May 1, 2007 - 5:13 AM

You are familiar with some of Mother Nature’s music already. Birds are the best at it, with human music and singing monkeys and other animals trailing behind. But there’s natural music produced by non-living phenomena, if we take the time to properly harness and listen to it.

Wind Harps

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Aeolian Harps have been around since ancient Greece, and are designed to be played by the wind. The huge harp pictured is in New Mexico, 30 miles North of Albuquerque along I-25.

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The stainless steel Venture Grant Aeolian Harp at the University of South Carolina has ten musical strings ranging up to 8 feet long connected to electronic pickups. Smaller Aeolian harps can be placed in windows or gardens. You can even make your own!

Different ways to make music with nature, after the jump.

The Great Stalacpipe Organ

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The Great Stalacpipe Organ is the world’s largest musical instrument, deep underground in Luray Caverns in Virginia. Rubber-tipped mallets tap the caves natural stalactites and produce musical tones. Stalactites that produce the exact tones needed cover 3.5 acres! Listen to the organ.

The Wave Organ

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The Wave Organ, a part of the Exploratorium in San Francisco, is a concrete and granite seaside sculpture that include 25 organ pipes. The pipes are activated by the action of the waves.

The Sea Organ

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The Sea Organ in Zadar, Croatia also uses the idea of wave-activated organ pipes. The 35 pipes beneath the steps are connected to whistle openings on top. The pipes are tuned to create harmonic chords instead of single notes. See and hear the effect at YouTube.

Solar Organ

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Musical tones are not limited to Mother Earth. Our sun has coils of electrified gas that carry acoustic waves. The effect is like plucking a guitar string, sending booms into the cosmos that dissipate within an hour. BLDGBLOG has more, with a link to an audio clip of the suns coronal booms.

Black Hole

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Nature’s music comes to us from even further away. A black hole in the Perseus Cluster is emitting sound waves. The tone is B flat, 57 octaves below middle C. What that may mean is anybody’s guess.

Update: Commenter Cameron suggested you also check out Ringing Rocks State Park in Pennsylvania, where the natural rocks make a ringing sound when struck by a hammer!

Thanks to Gail of Scribal Terror and Neatorama for inspiring this post.

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Comments (8)
  1. The Ringing Rocks in Pennsylvania

    http://www.unmuseum.org/ringrock.htm

  2. Stalacpipe organ listening link = 404 file not found

  3. Thanks Jason: fixed now.

  4. On a random family vacation to Williamsburg, we stopped at Luray Caverns to hear the organ. It is pretty wild. Apparently they hold weddings down there quite frequently…cave weddings sound a little too outlandish for my taste but maybe I’m just too conservative.

  5. What a great post! Thanks. :)

  6. Am I the only one annoyed by sites that feature things that make music/noise/sounds but don’t have links to recordings made by those things? I would love to get a sample of the difference between the “tuned” wave organ in San Francisco and the one in Croatia, without having to travel there.

    Also, the San Francisco sea organ uses “material taken from a demolished cemetery”; I’d love to hear more about that. I’ve heard of moving cemeteries before, but usually the headstones are moved as well. Demolishing a cemetery just sounds wrong.

  7. I’ve heard about the cave organ, it must have taken a really long time for them to find which stalactites emitted the precise pitches, that’s really wild.

    My home town (Port Angeles, Washington) has a gigantic windchime down by our waterfront. I guess it coiuld be considered nature-inspired music, even though it makes more noise than music.

  8. What about ‘The Sound Garden’ near Seattle? Designed by Dough Hollis, it’s also the source of the band name.

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