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Stats United States Science Technology

New Map Shows USA's Quietest Places 99

sciencehabit writes Based on 1.5 million hours of acoustical monitoring from places as remote as Dinosaur National Monument in Utah and as urban as New York City, scientists have created a map of noise levels across the country on an average summer day. After feeding acoustic data into a computer algorithm, the researchers modeled sound levels across the country including variables such as air and street traffic. Deep blue regions, such as Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming and the Great Sand Dunes National Park in Colorado, have background noise levels lower than 20 decibels — a silence likely as deep as before European colonization, researchers say. That's orders of magnitude quieter than most cities, where noise levels average 50-60 decibels. The National Park Service is using the map to identify places where human-made noise is affecting wildlife.
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New Map Shows USA's Quietest Places

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  • by invictusvoyd ( 3546069 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @06:47PM (#49069781)
    I'd like to spend my entire life in ... BTW does it have an internet connection?
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Yes, dial-up or satellte services though. ;)

    • by digsbo ( 1292334 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @09:17PM (#49070529)
      Don't be so sure. It seems great at first, but one of the things you might not anticipate is the revenge effect of a low noise noise floor. I moved from a horribly noisy situation to a much quieter one. It's great until you adjust. Then, little sounds that you'd never notice before start becoming a real problem. The thud of a closing car door a few hundred feet away, or the sounds of a second hand on an old fashioned clock, or any number of other things really can become distracting, even to the point of causing anxiety. Unless you're basically in the woods, in which case the sounds of your own house can become like a raging cacophony. White noise becomes a refuge. You wait for the rain.
      • Sounds like a plot to a classic 70s TV movie or an episode of one of those anthology shows. Got to have the protagonist cupping his ears, with a look of severe distress as non-stop quick shots of things making innocuous noises flash, interjected by the camera wildly pan-zooming his face.

        Needs more cowbell.

      • by Harlequin80 ( 1671040 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @09:47PM (#49070669)

        Well given I live in the woods I will tell you that they are not quiet!

        Come sundown the cicadas go mental and their noise can make talking to someone else hard. Then there are all the birds! Do you know how loud a cockatoo is!!! Let alone a kookaburra! Then at night you get the demonic noises of fighting possums, the sounds of male koalas and all the frogs. Damn you frogs!

        And then if you really really really want to hear a noise that will chill you to your bones - https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] - that is the sound of the Curlew. When you hear that for the first time in the middle of the night........

        It might be a different noise to cars, or sirens, or some morons crap music. But woods, quiet they are not!

        • As an Australian who currently lives in the US, I can tell you that North American forests are way, way quieter than Australian ones. Birds particularly are very quiet here by comparison. I really miss magpies warbling and whipbirds and yes even the occasional cockatoo screech :)

          Not only that but in Australia forests are noisy year-round. Here we are in deepest winter half the year (down to -30 C or lower) and there's not much animal activity happening in those months.

          • Fair enough. I have only been to the cities in the US so haven't experienced their forests first hand.

            I am lucky enough to have a pair of nesting black cockatoos in my property. They are about 100m from the house but if the windows are open in the morning they will wake me every time. I also have a creek that runs through as well so I get a huge number of frogs and cicadas. Yesterday at sundown my phone said 80db with its dodgy inaccurate sound meter.

      • Don't be so sure. .. It's great until you adjust. Then, little sounds that you'd never notice before start becoming a real problem. The thud of a closing car door a few hundred feet away, or the sounds of a second hand on an old fashioned clock, or any number of other things really can become distracting

        I wouldn't agree. I live somewhere relatively quiet, by a secondary road 10 miles from the nearest town, and I much prefer the quiet to the city where I was before.

        Basically, how disturbing sounds are depends how far they can be interpreted as a "threat". On a plain road, like where I live now, the low sound of a passing car can sound soothing - as long as it passes. However, there is a rough bit of ground by the road about 50 yards from me and occasionally a car stops in it, probably to use their mob

      • We were fools, fools to desire such silence! Silence was never meant to be this clear, this pure, this... quiet. For a few short days, we marveled. Then the... whispers... began.

        Were they Aramaic? Hyperborean? Some even more ancient tongue, first spoken by elder races under the red light of dying suns far from here? We do not know, but somehow, slowly... we began to UNDERSTAND.

        No, no, please! I don't want to remember! YOU WILL NOT MAKE ME REMEMBER! I saw brave men claw their own eyes out... oh, god, the scr

  • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @06:51PM (#49069791)

    The quietest place I've ever been is Wilderness State Park in Michigan in the fall. No wildlife, an extremely quiet white noise coming from the lake - it was strange. Bryce Canyon was pretty quiet, too, but Wilderness is strikingly quiet. It's also a "dark sky park" so the stars at night are phenomenal.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      The quietest place I've ever been is back-country camping in Teton National Park. That is until one night when a large animal came sniffing around our tent. To this day I still don't know what it was, but it sounded large and suitably freaked us out ;-)
      • Not once but twice I've had a skunk face to face with me in my tent. You'd think I'd learn something from that, but no. ;)
      • by Smerta ( 1855348 )

        I swear on my life, I have the exact same story (Dave or John, is that you?!?!)

        Back country camping the Tetons (this was summer 1990 I think), we took care to hoist anything with smell 100ft away, up in the trees... all of a sudden in the middle of the night, we hear an animal, which sounded very large, moving around our camp. Snorfling, walking, breathing, exploring.... it was probably only 5 minutes, but I swear, it felt like an hour. I have never, ever been more motionless in my life. 2 of us think

    • Wilderness is of course quiet. If you're prey, you're quiet 'cause if you're noisy you get eaten. If you're predator, you're quiet because if your prey hears you you won't eat.

      • Yes, but there's often a hell of a racket shortly after predator spots prey. And then there's sex, when one frog is croaking for a mate a fox can easily home in on it, when tens of thousands are doing it all at the same time even the fox's huge ears cannot pinpoint an individual frog unless it's almost standing on it. Disorientating predators with omni-directional noise is a common tactic for a variety of small critters. In certain years large green cicadas here in Oz fill the trees for a few weeks in summe
      • Wilderness is of course quiet. If you're prey, you're quiet 'cause if you're noisy you get eaten. If you're predator, you're quiet because if your prey hears you you won't eat.

        I live next to a undeveloped property and it's almost as noisy as the neighbors. Wind blows through the trees, limbs crack and fall off with a crash. All sorts of birds making a racket, frogs and gators - who can be one loud predator during mating season.

        A wilderness where there's no animals and no wind may be quiet, but nowhere near here.

    • by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @07:50PM (#49070087) Journal
      In 1980 I moved from inner suburban Melbourne to a sawmill town which is now a ghost town in the middle of a huge national park that straddles the NSW/VIC border. The town had about a dozen houses, a sawmill and a dairy farm, there were no other humans for at least 50km in every direction. The first few nights I found it difficult to sleep, bellowing cows, a chorus of frogs, barking of wild dogs, squealing of feral pigs, owls hooting, etc, all combined to make a huge racket all night long. Midday was the quietest, the mill was silent due to lunch and the birds were quiet because of the midday heat. The sheer volume of the morning chorus of birds while walking to work is something I will never forget. Since the 80's I've spent a lot of time in the bush, camping with my kids, etc. Never have I come across another place with such prolific (and loud) wildlife. I feel privileged to have lived and worked in such a place and even though it meant losing my house and job at the time, I'm glad it is now a national park.
      • Try Binna Burra in the Gold Coast Hinterland. You can camp there, or stay in cabins and you get a mixture of temperate rainforest animals and temperate eucalyptus. The mix gives two sets of wildlife for your morning chorus. You also get in the morning the paddymelons out in force.

    • by Mryll ( 48745 )

      The Sand Dunes park is also one of the places least affected by light pollution, beautiful viewing. Unfortunately the presence of 24 hour lighting in nearby ranching operations is increasing.

  • I'm so blue... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by pubwvj ( 1045960 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @07:01PM (#49069849)

    Where we are is pretty deep blue on the map but I bet it is even bluer in reality as we are in a valley surrounded by mountains that lift the sound up over us providing an extra buffer. Loving it in the deep blue.

    Interesting to note the map also looks like the city lights maps.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Interesting to note the map also looks like the city lights maps.

      No surprise at all there that the maps would look so similar.

    • Duh. Where there is human, there is light, noise and I dare say a pollution map wouldn't be that much different.

      • Except that air pollution can travel with the wind, and can affect communities that aren't producing the problem at all.
      • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @08:00PM (#49070137)
      • by Anonymous Coward
        If it is supposed to be an average Summer day, then it wouldn't just be human noise, but the whole South and other parts in the east would light up from cicadas...
    • nteresting to note the map also looks like the city lights maps.

      Interesting that they both show a sharp verticle divide right down the center of the country. When I first saw it on the light pollution maps it was so sharp that I wondered whether it was a time-of-photo artifact.

    • If said light map wannabe *interactively* overlays iPhone to Android to Blackberry adoption in your own neighborhood, you can still learn a thing or two:
      https://www.mapbox.com/labs/tw... [mapbox.com]
      Correlating iPhone and blackberry adoptions to high vs low class income areas to your expectations / preconeptions of your "poor" neighborhood and seeing if the map matches them is neat.

      Looking at rent price differences graphically if you don't even live in Manhattan also provides some education and amusement http://www.hous [housingmaps.com]

  • by djbckr ( 673156 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @07:03PM (#49069855)
    I'm a part-time musician and audio engineer. Because of this, I have a more sensitive perception of noise than probably most people. I have lived in urban/suburban areas most of my adult life and I can hardly stand it. Even quiet recording studios don't really get it as quiet as I'd like. I try to get out to the wilderness whenever I can which is every couple of months - I mean way out there where you will find very few people nearby. It is difficult to find words to describe how nice and peaceful it is when it's so quiet - not to hear noise of any kind, except from nature. We are surrounded by air-conditioning and cars, and people and civilization - and it frankly takes a toll on my sanity (the sound is all I'm talking about). Much to my wife's chagrin, I regularly wear earplugs to restaurants, and always carry them with me. It's really amazing how loud things are.
    • Get yourself a pair of Bose QC25.

      • Noise cancelling headphones are highly frequency-dependent, and typically attenuate only 20 dB or so. Earplugs can attenuate 30 dB, and aren't as frequency-dependent. And they are dirt cheap. The only downside is that they don't play music.
        • by pavon ( 30274 )

          Yeah, and good earplugs like these [etymotic.com] have a nearly flat frequency response which make it easier to have a conversation in loud room, unlike foam earplugs or headphones that muffle the sound in addition to attenuating it.

          • But make sure you don't mix up the left and right earplugs, or else everything sounds backwards. $12 for a pair of earplugs? Might as well buy one of those $10k audio cables while you're at it.
            • by pavon ( 30274 )

              $12 is cheap for something that lasts years (with occasional use) and prevents you from going deaf at rock concerts, while still allowing you to hear the music like it was supposed to sound, instead of sounding like you are underwater. These are not audiophile pseudoscience garbage, the frequency response of the earplugs is scientifically quantifiable, and the difference in sound quality is immediately obvious to anyone who tries them, not just idiots with "golden ears" who can hear differences that don't e

              • My ears are so good that I can tell if the bits of a music file are coming from magnetic drive, optical disc or flash storage.

      • by acoustix ( 123925 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @10:58PM (#49071011)

        Get yourself a pair of Bose QC25.

        Did you just tell an audio engineer to buy Bose products? Why don't you kick his dog and call his mother a whore while you're at it.

        • Oh for the modpoints :-)

        • He was talking about getting some peace and quiet, not about getting the best audio you can buy.

          AFAIK, the best commercially available noise-canceling headphones are the QC25.

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @07:43PM (#49070055)

      If recording studios aren't quieter than nature, then it seems like perhaps they haven't been built correctly. I've been in recording studios before at work, and the lack of any ambient sound in the booths is almost disturbing in their deep, dead silence. Granted, it sounds like you have more sensitive ears than most, though, so perhaps you can pick up on stuff I couldn't.

      Nature actually has quite a bit of low-level ambient noise from the wind blowing though plants and trees, flowing water or surf, not to mention insects, and various animals that sing, cry, chirp, and howl on occasion. There's a reason modern films often can't use sound directly captured from shoots on location. However, I can perhaps understand what you mean, in that these noises seem to be much more soothing than cityscapes or other man-made sounds. It always seems easier for my brain to filter these noises out than a loud ticking of a clock, the hum and rattling of an air conditioner, or vehicles driving on a nearby freeway.

      You should try to visit an anechoic chamber sometime. The near absolute silence drives some people nuts, but I'll bet you'd love it! I've heard that after a time, you can actually even your own heart and the sound of blood pumping through your body, since there's nothing else to cover up such faint sounds.

      • by djbckr ( 673156 )
        Fully agree - properly built studios are crazy quiet, but most I have been in are what I call "average quiet". Good enough for the task at hand, as most musical instruments are pretty loud. But for 99 percent of the stuff recorded these days, your bedroom is good enough unless you are near a noisy road or something. I've been in an anechoic chamber a couple of times and they practically suck the life out of you. I also agree that nature most certainly does have an ambient noise, but on a clear summer day wi
        • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @10:41PM (#49070909)

          I guess your experience in the anechoic chamber was similar to most people then. I'd like to try it myself someday, but based on my time in very quiet studios, I'm sure I'd find it as uncomfortable as anyone else.

          As far as the difference with outdoor environments, nature often tends to have a lot of diffuse and absorptive surfaces compared to our very unnatural flat and reflective indoor surfaces. Flat-sided, boxy rooms tend to create a lot of harsh and unnatural sounding echo and reverberation unless special precautions are taken like you see in high quality recording studios or music halls.

          You can immediately tell from the difference in ambient reflections when you step from an indoor to an outdoor environment - first, because half of the sound waves never come back (going skyward), and from those that do bounce back, they're all nicely diffused from a wide variety of irregular surfaces, unlike what we typically have indoors. I'd guess that may help to create the pleasant aural experience we have outside in nature, where even if it's not perfectly quiet, the background diffused pleasantly into patterns of easily ignorable pink or brown noise.

          I pay attention to stuff like this because I'm a videogame programmer that has previously specialized in audio programming. Part of the work I did was with DSP algorithms that would help differentiate between those two environments without necessarily baking those effects into the source material, generating artificial reverberation and echo effects on demand. The videogame industry has long had standardized hardware with some of these systems built in (EAX & I3DL2) , but the more recent trends are doing this all in software, which actually gives us some more flexibility in tweaking how they work. So, I spent a lot of time looking at the relationship between environmental structures and materials, and how that contributed to the overall aural scene using these DSP algorithms. It was pretty interesting and challenging work.

      • Anechoic chambers are interesting places. The engineering department at the university had one and just walking down the hall next to it was creepy. It was almost like a huge vacuum that sucked up the sounds in the hall if the door was open. I would have loved to spend a few min in there, but I get the feeling it would not have been a pleasant experience for me.

      • > anechoic chamber ... The near absolute silence drives some people nuts,

        Those things definitely are "weird" -- in a good way :-)

    • by sribe ( 304414 )

      I mean way out there where you will find very few people nearby. It is difficult to find words to describe how nice and peaceful it is when it's so quiet - not to hear noise of any kind, except from nature.

      I know. I chose to live in such a place ;-)

    • My job will sort you out. Engineer at an industrial plant. They just fired up a 30MW air compressor and are using it to blow crud out of very large pipework. I'm sitting at my desk in an office with earmuffs on and the noise is still unbearable.

  • by djbckr ( 673156 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @07:07PM (#49069889)
    The summary is pretty much the entire contents of the linked article, except for a relatively low-resolution map of the US with colors indicating what's loud and quiet. You guessed it - cities are loud, wilderness is quiet.
  • Obligatory XKCD (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    http://xkcd.com/1138/

    Just another heat map of the population. Nothing to see here, folks.

    • Re:Obligatory XKCD (Score:5, Interesting)

      by dsginter ( 104154 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @07:40PM (#49070035)
      Actually, no - this isn't just another heat map of the population. Take the Midwest, for example: there's some pretty rural areas there but, because they are flat, two factors dominate: sound is free to travel and wind is a huge contributing factor. I'm from Michigan and spent my summers on a large farm. When the wind wasn't present, you could hear things from miles away. However, in a truly quiet area (a tranquil valley is the only place that I've ever encountered this), it becomes immediately apparent when wind and man-made noise vanishes. I've been fortunate enough to experience this and it is difficult to describe (scary, awesome, surreal, etc). That said, I'm noticing that this is a "macro" map. There are plenty of quiet places hidden in that mix. They need to add a zoom feature to that map. But, if they did, they'd need to update it in only a matter of weeks or months. Silence is truly magical.
  • well what do you know ....
    that map looks exactly like a map of CITY LIGHTS

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Why isn't Alaska represented?

  • As other commenters have noticed, the map looks like a light map, a little TOO much like a light map.
    At first I thought they actually HAD used a light map, just for the sake of illustration, but it clearly shows a legend in decibels.

    Here is a light map from NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/sites/defa... [nasa.gov]

    You will notice a few small but very bright dots in North Dakota. These are not cities, they are oil fields. They aren't nearly as loud as a city of comparable light output, yet they still show up as bright spots on

  • Your map is ready.

  • It's only that silent, because there's nobody there to hear the falling trees and shitting bears.

  • I understand why the places marked in blue and yellow are as shown. Why does the entire midwest have an orange color?
  • In all my travels across six continents and 49 states, I have never been anywhere quieter than Death Valley.

    Death Valley has: no flaura*, no fauna*, one road*.

    *Yes, obviously, there are brine shrimp and microscopic organisms and the odd car. That being said, no trees, grasses are there to rustle in the rare winds 282 ft below sea level.

    • You haven't been to Antarctica?
      "The Simpsons are going to Antarctica!"

      P.S. Of course it could be a different continent bu that is most likely.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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