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Robin often mistaken for nightingale

Investigation technique pages
Analysing cold spots
Doors that open by themselves
The 'new house effect'
Vigils in the dark?
Why use science?
What approach to investigation?
Paranormal words
What is a haunted place?
Paranormal activity or nature?
Is my house haunted?
Science applied to paranormal
Geology and ghosts
Paranormal & science theories
Geomagnetism in the paranormal
Using people on vigils
Science for investigators
Paranormal sounds
Recording EVP
Evidence is everything!

The urban nightingale

It is doubtful that a nightingale ever really sang in London's Berkeley Square. However, people in UK cities regularly report hearing a 'nightingale' in their suburbs. The nightingale is a scarce bird of the woods and difficult to see even there. It is unlikely that it ever sings in cities. What most people have heard is the familiar robin (above). Robins sing all night long in some areas, though it is a relatively new phenomenon. The birds usually sing near street lights, apparently fooled into thinking it is daylight!

There are many other creatures abroad at night, whose sounds sometimes get reported as paranormal. Foxes produce all sorts of odd noises (right) and are common in urban areas. Badgers are found in some suburbs of London and other cities. Rather more common are hedgehogs that amble around gardens in the dark making odd snuffling noises.

On ASSAP vigils, crows have been heard to call all night, even though they are normally only do it by day. Gulls, too, are prone to calling all night when they feel like it. Again, it is possible that the extensive illumination of cities at night makes them more active than they might otherwise be.

   

Ghostly whispering

OK, this isn't exactly a natural sound but then, it's not exactly paranormal either. It is particularly important in the new house effect.

On one ASSAP investigation there was a large room where various people had reported hearing whispering. The words couldn't quite be made out but it certainly sounded like people whispering.

On a later vigil, investigators heard the whispering too, in the quiet of the night. It became obvious, however, that the sound was made by water flowing through a distant pipe. The faint, disjointed hissing had enough variations in it to sound like people whispering. It really did sound like words but none could ever be made out. That's because, of course there were no actual words, just water running turbulently through a pipe. The effect stopped as soon as the water stopped flowing.

A similar effect has been heard from an electric fan. The fan, like the water, did not run entirely smoothly. It could, sometimes, sound like people talking just under the whirr of the fan.

In these cases we seem to have an aural equivalent of seeing 'faces' in random patterns. Just as our visual systems are programmed to see faces, so our aural pathways hear voices, even when they're not there.

The water in the pipe (and the air around the fan) were both flowing turbulently. It is not like white noise, which is a tediously predictable hissing sound. Instead, there are constant unpredictable changes, some of which can sound like vocal consonants. This chaotic (as opposed to random) sound seems to be good at fooling our senses into hearing whispering that is not there.

© Maurice Townsend 2007