giant manta ray, Manta birostris, swimming on top of lava formations in the dive site El Boiler, San Benedicto Island, Revillagigedo islands.

The Truth Behind The Ocean “Bloop” Sound Of 1997: Scientists Reveal Their Groundbreaking Discovery

From time to time, there are unexplained phenomena that capture the public’s curiosity. Whether it’s a UFO, mysterious tracks in the woods, or an unexplained sound at night, it seldom takes long for fear and curiosity to intermingle.

And when that happens, the public’s imagination runs away with them, and colorful theories abound. That was precisely what happened after a strange “bloop” appeared in the Pacific Ocean in 1997. But after years of speculation and wondering, scientists finally figured out what it was.

Not what they were looking for

giant manta ray, Manta birostris, swimming on top of lava formations in the dive site El Boiler, San Benedicto Island, Revillagigedo islands.
Luis Javier Sandoval/VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), researchers had set up underwater microphones called hydrophones throughout the southern Pacific Ocean.

The Antarctic hydrophones allowed them to listen for underwater volcanic activity.

ADVERTISEMENT

The noise that launched a mystery

French diver Eric Blin, a water environment and coastline waste-management and biodiversity expert who is taking part in the 'sea@dvanced sound' project, checks a hydrophone off the coast of the Ajaccio, the capital of the French Mediterranean island Corsica on September 11, 2019.
Boris Horvat/AFP via Getty Images

But as Wired reported, one day in 1997 saw those hydrophones pick up an extremely loud, ultra-low frequency sound.

This tone was loud enough that hydrophones placed over 3,000 miles apart were able to pick it up.

ADVERTISEMENT

Nothing they’d heard before

A aerial view of the submerged Fukutoku-Okanoba volcano, forming a new island near Sou
Gallo Images/”USGS/NASA Landsat data processed by Orbital Horizon”.

Researchers logged multiple instances of this loud sound, but its unique characteristics made it hard to describe as anything but the “bloop.”

And for almost a decade, it confounded the world as nothing like it had been recorded before then.

ADVERTISEMENT

A daunting task

Ian Pritchard, a marine biologist with the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory, returns to shore with non-native European green crabs collected in underwater traps from Seadrift Lagoon in Stinson Beach, Calif. on Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2017.
Paul Chinn/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

Although members of the NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) were fascinated by the sound and eager to learn its origin, this was no easy task.

That’s because over 95% of the depths of the world’s oceans have yet to be explored by humans. Finding what made the “bloop” was akin to searching for a very loud needle in the world’s biggest haystack.

ADVERTISEMENT

The “bloop” goes public

getty-images-pECVGXCznmE-unsplash
Getty Images/unsplash+

According to Wired, a wide array of colorful theories gained popularity as the public gradually caught wind of the “bloop” in the years that followed the discovery.

And as media reports described the sound as “organic” in nature, those theories only escalated.

ADVERTISEMENT

The most popular theory

Giant moray with scuba diver, Lycodontis javanicus, Egypt, Red Sea, Hurghada
Reinhard Dirscherl/ullstein bild via Getty Images

Given this “organic” framing of the noise, perhaps the most popular theory among the public was that some massive sea creature had caused the “bloop.”

After all, it’s not unheard of for new species to be discovered even decades after this sound was first detected.

ADVERTISEMENT

The stuff of legends

20000-leagues-under-the-sea_L1oQrq
Walt Disney Pictures via MovieStillsDb

According to the NOAA, one of the possibilities people entertained at the time was that the bloop had come from a giant squid.

But for that to be true, it would have to be a squid of unprecedented size that would look like it came from 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea.

ADVERTISEMENT

Slightly more plausible

Adult blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) from the eastern Pacific Ocean
HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Other theories held a massive whale responsible for the sound. And since the world is home to some truly gargantuan whale species (like the blue whale pictured here), the idea that one was behind the “bloop” didn’t seem completely implausible.

Still, either a blue whale would have to make a noise that scientists had never observed before, or an even larger, undiscovered whale species would need to exist.

ADVERTISEMENT

The most outlandish hypothesis

pacific-rim_3cab7a
Warner Bros./Legendary Pictures via MovieStillsDb

Those unsatisfied with these explanations who nonetheless believed the “bloop” originated from a life form ended up getting creative with their explanations.

For some, the noise was caused by what the NOAA described as “some sea creature unknown to science.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Only half-kidding

tonemason David Christison works on his piece 'Cthulhu' as he takes part in a stone carving festival at York Minster on August 19, 2018 in York, England.
Ian Forsyth/Getty Images

As Wired reported, some horror fans were excited to point out that the point of origin for the “bloop” was just over 1,000 miles from where author H.P. Lovecraft envisioned the sunken city of R’yleh.

For those unaware, that city was where the infamous mythical creature Cthulu was supposed to be held. And while most of these horror aficionados weren’t seriously suggesting an escaped Cthulu was causing havoc near the South Pole, it was an attractive thought.

ADVERTISEMENT

Alternate theories start to surface

Vanguard-class submarine HMS Vigilant, one of the UK's four nuclear warhead-carrying submarines at HM Naval Base Clyde, Faslane, west of Glasgow, Scotland on April 29, 2019.
James Glossop/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

While theories that attributed the sound to mysterious sea life were certainly popular, others didn’t feel that a plausible explanation for the “bloop” required the invention of a new species.

For them, it was more likely that researchers uncovered the sonic side effects of a secret underwater experiment by one of the world’s many military forces.

ADVERTISEMENT

Far more mundane explanations

Lower Saxony, Bensersiel: A woman takes a picture of a crab cutter moored on a quay wall in the harbor in changeable weather.
Hauke-Christian Dittrich/picture alliance via Getty Images

According to the NOAA, some explanations put far more common vessels as the source of the “bloop.” For some individuals, ship engines or even the winches on fishing boats could have made the sound.

But considering how far-reaching and loud the sound was, such explanations severely overestimated how noisy either of those devices is capable of being.

ADVERTISEMENT

Fun speculation but nothing more

Catfishes, known as invasive species and increasing in number in recent years, living with hundreds of plastic waste at the bottom, are seen during the awareness dive of Sahika Ercumen, United Nations Development Program (UNDP)
Sebnem Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

When Wired spoke to NOAA seismologist Robert Dziak, he made it clear that nobody tasked with uncovering the mystery behind the “bloop” seriously thought a giant animal was responsible.

He also explained what led the public to believe otherwise.

ADVERTISEMENT

A misleading edit

A diver is seen with stalagmite in Big Cave, Hatay, Turkiye on October 27, 2022.
Tahsin Ceylan/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

As Dziak told Wired, “What has led to a lot of the misperception of the animal origin sound of the Bloop is how the sound is played back.”

By that, he meant that the noise commonly heard by the public was about 16 times the normal speed of the “bloop’s” original audio file, which made it sound like an animal cry.

ADVERTISEMENT

A lumbering rumble

Lightning bolts strike One World Trade Center in New York City as it fans out over the Hudson River and Jersey City, New Jersey during a thunderstorm on April 1, 2023, as seen from Hoboken, New Jersey.
Gary Hershorn/Getty Images

Dziak further explained that when the sound was slowed down to its normal speed, it sounded more like an earthquake or a rolling thunderstorm.

That meant that for NOAA scientists, the most likely explanation was that a sustained natural process was causing the “bloop.” They just had to figure out what it was.

ADVERTISEMENT

Some well-trained ears

A hydrophone floats in the water off the coast of the Ajaccio, the capital of the French Mediterranean island Corsica on September 11, 2019 as part of the 'sea@dvanced sound' project.
Boris Horvat/AFP via Getty Images

What made the “bloop” so exciting to researchers was the fact that it’s actually quite rare for the NOAA’s hydrophones to pick up a sound they didn’t recognize.

As Dziak explained to Wired, almost every sound that comes in fits into one of five major categories: Geophysical, anthropogenic, ice, weather, and animals.

ADVERTISEMENT

Rare and usually inconsequential exceptions

French diver Eric Blin, a water environment and coastline waste-management and biodiversity expert who is taking part in the 'sea@dvanced sound' project, checks a hydrophone off the coast of the Ajaccio, the capital of the French Mediterranean island Corsica on September 11, 2019.
Boris Horvat/AFP via Getty Images

The weather, ice, and animal categories are self-explanatory. But the geophysical category refers to events like underwater volcanic eruptions or earthquakes, while the anthropogenic category has to do with sounds made by ships and other human creations.

In Dziak’s words, “Anything else is usually just some kind of electronic interference with the signal.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The search was on

Researchers leaving with the zodiac to collect material with detail of the mooring quay almost submerged by high tide and soil material for earthworks in the foreground, on December 27, 2019 in King George Island, Antarctica.
Alessandro Dahan/Getty Images

But since it was unclear which category the “bloop” fit into (if any), PMEL researchers set up more hydrophones in the region it was first detected.

According to the NOAA, those devices weren’t intended to find the source of the sound so much as to study the sounds of underwater volcanos and earthquakes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Closer to the truth

Tourists and scientists visit the Base Y operating as a museum by the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust (UKAHT), established in 1950 and used by British scientists for 5 years, in Horseshoe Island, Antarctica on February 26, 2023.
Sebnem Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

But the closer those hydrophones were placed to Antarctica, the closer researchers came to discovering the true answer to the “bloop.”

And in 2005, the biggest clue to that answer finally came.

ADVERTISEMENT

Listening closely

Antarctica, Iceberg In Bransfield Strait, King George Island Background.
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images

As Dziak told Wired, researchers were particularly interested in the data they recorded from the Bransfield Strait and the Drake Passage.

Both of these water bodies are near Antarctica’s northwesternmost peninsula, and their sounds were subject to what Dziak called an “acoustic survey.”

ADVERTISEMENT

A perfect match

View from the Brazilian Navy's Oceanographic Ship Ary Rongel as it goes through the Drake Passage on its way to Antarctica on March 2, 2014.
Vanderlei Almeida/AFP via Getty Images

The NOAA’s acoustic survey went from 2005 to 2010, and by the time it was concluded, researchers were confident they had heard the same sounds that confounded the world in 1997.

Dziak described the audio they gathered as nearly identical to the “bloop” in terms of how frequent the sounds were and how long they persisted each time they were heard.

ADVERTISEMENT

The mystery was finally solved

Iceberg off the Antarctic Peninsula, Antarctica
David Tipling/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Unlike when the “bloop” was first discovered, the increased use of monitoring equipment in the area made it significantly easier to determine what was making these distinct noises.

And so, the NOAA discovered that the researchers in 1997 were listening to an icequake.

ADVERTISEMENT

What is an icequake?

This file picture shows an enormous iceberg (R) breaking off the Knox Coast in the Australian Antarctic Territory on January 11, 2008.
Torsten Blackwood/AFP via Getty Images

According to the NOAA, this term refers to the sounds and vibrations resulting from an iceberg breaking off a glacier.

Since that was occurring during the organization’s acoustic survey, it stood to reason that something similar happened when hydrophones first picked up the “bloop.”

ADVERTISEMENT

A sleeping giant

Antarctica, Icebergs...
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images

While it was likely satisfying to uncover the source of the “bloop” at long last, that wasn’t all that this acoustic analysis uncovered.

In Dziak’s words, “It became clear that the sounds of ice breaking up and cracking is a dominant source of natural sound in the southern ocean.”

ADVERTISEMENT

More common than it seems

A picture taken on August 17, 2019 shows an iceberg calving with a mass of ice breaking away from the Apusiajik glacier, near Kulusuk (aslo spelled Qulusuk), a settlement in the Sermersooq municipality located on the island of the same name on the southeastern shore of Greenland.
Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP via Getty Images

Despite how long it took to determine what an icequake sounds like, it’s actually a pretty common occurrence in the world’s polar regions.

As Dziak said, “Each year there are tens of thousands of what we call ‘icequakes’ created by the cracking and melting of sea ice and ice calving off glaciers into the ocean, and these signals are very similar in character to the Bloop.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Growing more common all the time

Icebergs break off the Vatnajökull Glacier before floating to sea, July 2006. The 8,300-square-kilometre Vatnajökull is as big as all the other glaciers in Europe put together.
Marcel Mochet/AFP via Getty Images

According to the NOAA, these icequakes have become more frequent in recent decades as the global effects of climate change become more apparent.

As glaciers experience more ice melting, icebergs are more likely to break off from them and eventually melt into the ocean.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *