Infrasound waves are massive. Because they have such long wavelengths, they can travel over huge distances and pass through solid objects (like mountains or buildings) with very little loss of energy. This is a classic example of Systems Thinking where a "hidden" variable affects the entire environment.
The Source: It is generated by massive natural events: earthquakes, volcanoes, avalanches, and severe storms. It’s also produced by man-made machines like wind turbines, heavy engines, and sub-woofers.
The Detection: While we lack the "biological hardware" to hear it, animals like elephants and whales use infrasound to communicate over hundreds of miles—a literal Golden Thread of information connecting them across vast distances.
Infrasound refers to sound waves with frequencies below the threshold of human hearing (typically lower than 20 Hz). While we cannot "hear" these frequencies with our ears, we "feel" them with our bodies.
Researcher Note:
The Resonant Frequency: Every object has a frequency where it naturally vibrates. If infrasound hits the resonant frequency of your internal organs, it can cause nausea or dizziness. This is the biological version of Cacophony—disruption at the systemic level.
The Resonant Frequency: Every object has a frequency where it naturally vibrates. If infrasound hits the resonant frequency of your internal organs, it can cause nausea or dizziness. This is the biological version of Cacophony—disruption at the systemic level.