Windsor Star

Mysterious Arctic pings may just be ice

Noise emerging from seabed confounds locals

- DAVID PUGLIESE

The theories range from UFOs operating under the ice to the release of methane gas to Russian or U.S. submarines lurking in Canadian waters.

But one possible explanatio­n for the mysterious sounds seemingly coming from the ocean floor in Canada’s Arctic may be rather straightfo­rward, suggests a U.S. scientist working on a project that generates lowfrequen­cy sound in the far North: It could be ice rubbing together.

Last week, acting on a request from the government of Nunavut, the Canadian military sent a CP-140 Aurora aircraft to conduct surveillan­ce of Fury and Hecla Strait, northwest of the hamlet of Igloolik. Hunters in the area have reported hearing noises ranging from hums to pings to beeps. They say the noises are driving animals away.

“The sound that has been heard in the area seems to be emitted from the seabed and underwater,” Paul Quassa, a member of Nunavut’s legislativ­e assembly, told lawmakers on Oct. 25.

According to Department of National Defence spokesman Dan Le Bouthillie­r, the Aurora’s crew conducted “various multi-sensor searches in the area, including an acoustic search for 1.5 hours, without detecting any acoustic anomalies. The crew did not detect any surface or subsurface contacts.”

One of the more prominent theories focused on the claim the sounds were being emitted by a science project in the Arctic funded by the Office of Naval Research in the U.S.

That project, called the Canada Basin Acoustic Propagatio­n Experiment, or CANAPE, uses low-frequency sound to determine how the ongoing changes in sea ice affect acoustics.

But Peter Worcester of the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at the University of California said the sounds being generated by CANAPE are very low and too far away to be heard in the Fury and Hecla Strait.

“Even if the signals were louder, any underwater sound generated north of Alaska would be blocked from reaching Fury and Hecla Strait by the many islands in the Canadian Archipelag­o.”

Worcester said he didn’t know what would cause the mystery sounds and is loath to speculate. But he noted much of the acoustic noise in the Arctic is caused by ice rubbing together, cracking, and moving. Early Arctic explorers called the noises the “Devil’s Symphony” with descriptio­ns ranging from buzzing to wheezing and loud bangs.

“You can even get things where the ice hums, where you get sounds that resonate almost like an organ pipe,” Worcester explained. “There was a paper written about the notion there are various melodies associated with the sounds generated by sea ice.”

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