Discover the sound that could preserve Utah’s arches - Science Club

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Friday, October 22, 2021

Discover the sound that could preserve Utah’s arches

There is a serene—and deceptive—kind of quiet surrounding Bryce Canyon’s scarlet arches and hoodoos, but only because it’s hard to hear the rock music.

Rock formations, including the famed towers, fins, and arches of Utah’s Bryce Canyon, Arches, and Canyonlands national parks, emit a constant, unique vibrational resonant frequency. These are what Jeff Moore, a geoscientist at the University of Utah, calls their “songs.”

“I liken them to a voice,” Moore says. “It’s something that’s very real, and constantly around us, but human senses just aren’t tuned for that kind of frequency.”

There is a serene—and deceptive—kind of quiet surrounding Bryce Canyon’s scarlet arches and hoodoos, but only because it’s hard to hear the rock music.

Rock formations, including the famed towers, fins, and arches of Utah’s Bryce Canyon, Arches, and Canyonlands national parks, emit a constant, unique vibrational resonant frequency. These are what Jeff Moore, a geoscientist at the University of Utah, calls their “songs.”

“I liken them to a voice,” Moore says. “It’s something that’s very real, and constantly around us, but human senses just aren’t tuned for that kind of frequency.”

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