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Apparently, the pulsed energy by-passes the ear structure and induces signals directly in the auditory nerve. The buzzing sound as heard from UFOs may be stimulated directly within the head of a targeted person by high frequency radiation being pulsed at a low, audio rate.
Taos Hum and people began hearing the hum around 1990 in Taos, NM. How does the low frequency noise (between 30 (33) and 80 Hz on the frequency scale) affect people?
Those that are able to hear the hum are complaining of headaches, anxiety, shortness of breath and other unpleasant effects from the noise. What is the normal electromagnetic field that the human body can tolerate? Visit our EMF chart. Some people feel uneasy at around 10 Hz, HAARP frequencies are between 10-20 Hz. These are frequencies that affect the human nervous system. HAARP stands for High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program Updates. At around 60 Hz the effects can be dangerous to the body. It is said that melatonin reduction takes place. ElectroMagnetic Frequency(EMF) exposure has been implicated in certain cancers, depression and miscarriages due to the depression of M synthesis by the PG which is necessary for normal immune functioning. Now you are able to buy, relatively cheaply, melatonin over the counter. In a very good article called The Hum - a worldwide phenomenon from Angus Sutherland, he points out that according to the United States Census Bureau, the Taos has a total area of 13.9 km² (5.4 mi²). 13.9 km² (5.4 mi²) of it is land and none of the area is covered with water. What he might have missed is that the people who are hearing these sounds do have fluid nearby.... from their inner ears!
The outer ear focuses and directs sound waves into the middle ear. In the middle ear, the energy of these pressure waves is translated into mechanical vibrations of the middle ear’s bone structure. The cochlea of the inner ear propagates these mechanical signals as waves in fluid and membranes, and finally transduces them to nerve impulses which are transmitted to the brain. Surprisingly enough the cochlea not only receives sounds, but can also produce sounds such as ringing in the ears. In an article from BeyondDiscovery.org, they write, "In the seventeenth century G.J. Duvérney, a French anatomist, proposed that the ear used a set of resonators. In the nineteenth century most scientists believed that some form of "resonance" was behind our ability to distinguish pitch. Resonance theory was most fully developed by the German scientist Hermann von Helmholtz. He believed that tuned fibers in the basilar membrane, on which Corti rests, vibrate in response to particular sound frequencies, just as a specific piano string will begin to vibrate in response to a sound at just the right frequency.
It has been suspected since 1851 that hair cells are responsible for translating sound into electric signals that nerves can convey to the brain."
In 1977 David Kemp, of Institute of Otology and Laryngology in London, discovered that the cochlea not only receives sounds but actually produces them as well. This is why some people hear ringing in their ears because their cochlea is emitting sounds.
So does this mean that the hair in these people's cochlea has been damaged and if so how could this happen? Could there really be EMF forces at work and if so how can we recognize the dangers before they effect us? Or maybe there are UFO influences from the area, past or current visits still emminating vibrations from inter-dimensional worldly travel? Let us know what you find out.
Last Wednesday night I attended the monthly meeting of the UFO Study Group of Greater St. Louis. The group gathers in a big room in the St. Louis County Library on Lindbergh Boulevard.
Back in July an ocean exploration team led by Swedish researchers found what some suggested may be a flying saucer on the sea floor. There were even skid marks behind the large object that suggested it may have moved across, or crashed on, the sea floor.
Friday the 13th ended up being a very lucky day for a California man who videoed several UFOs flying near Los Angeles. The video, allegedly shot by a freelance photographer going by the name Nerdumb, shows several bright lights in the sky over Hermosa Beach that disappear as a helicopter crosses below them. It was posted to YouTube and is making the rounds in UFO circles.
Once again, alien conspiracy theorists have attempted to use publicly available NASA images to prove that the space agency must be engaging in an elaborate UFO cover-up. And, once again, they've been foiled by the laws of physics.
Stir started when agency made public new space images some said indicated a mysterious triangular object headed our way.