The Ocean's Sound Barrier
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April 24, 1990
The Ocean's Sound Barrier
A mysterious carpet, about 300 feet thick, believed to consist of
a cornucopeia of sea-life, comes out only during the daylight
hours to become the sea's "false bottom."
This "false bottom" was discovered by Navy ships making depth
soundings during the war. The soundings are derived from the time
it takes for echoes to be reflected to the surface from the ocean
floor. The returning echoes are then recorded on instruments
which give a very precise map, within inches, of the depth at a
specific location.
By using certain wavelengths of sound, echoes were received from
depths between 1,000 and 1,500 feet. The odd thing is that the
ocean bottom in the locations being scanned were known to be two
to three miles deep.
The most plausible explanation was that there were vast quantities
of floating or swimming objects, constituting almost a solid
surface at the depths from which the echoes came.
The false bottom ONLY begins at daylight and exists throughout the
day to disappear at twilight.
The false bottom carpet covers all oceans, even the Antarctic.
Echoes taken over miles of ocean floor show the carpet to be
practically continuous over thousands of square miles.
General agreement among Naval navigators is that the carpet is
made up of hordes of sea creatures.
However, they have not proved observable by any known technique.
The wavelengths of the sound waves which echo back give an idea of
the size and abundance of the masses which seem to make up the
carpet. Calculations show from ten to twenty of these organisms
in each cubic meter of water.
The creatures or whatever makes up the carpet echoes ONLY long
sound waves, while high frequency sounds pass through them like
light through glass and is bounced back from the sea bottom.
The constituents of the carpet apparently cannot stand light since
at dawn they sink from within about 100 feet of the surface to
levels below the penetration of the light.
The false bottom rises at sunset at a measured rate of forty to
fifty feet a minute. No swimming fish could rise so rapidly
through the decreasing pressure without suffering the "bends".
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A wide spectrum of sound wavelengths has been used in attempting
to analyze the phenomenon. Sophisticated modern equipment using
hydrophones has recorded echoes from individual objects at
distances of a few feet.
These new observations show the carpet to consist of a bunch of
"somethings" ranging from a foot to eighteen inches. Too large to
be a squid and far too large to be shrimp.
Based on such data, the carpet is believed to consist of deep
water fish. If this is true, then there might be a food source
beyond man's wildest dreams in our oceans.
Navy divers have swum directly through the false bottom at night
when it was within less than 200 feet of the surface.
Direct observation shows enormous numbers of euphasids and other
SMALL organisms, but very few fish.
The texture of the carpet is believed to change radically from
night (loosely packed) to day (tightly packed) based on the
dispersal of the organisms over wide areas of surface waters as
determined by the photic or thermal energies present.
The entire phenomenon is quite mysterious and brings up many
different theories. Water temperatures could cause a laminar or
turbulent flow, some form of water structuring which would form
temporary colloids, maybe a point of anomaly (4 degrees
centigrade) which might constitute a world brain consisting of
structured water, or other interesting possibilities.
The Navy divers saw almost nothing which could account for such a
wide and relatively unbroken echo pattern.
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The material for this article appeared in a book called, "The
Strangest Things in the World" by Thomas R. Henry and published in
1958.
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FINIS
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