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For Tune-Carrying Sand Dunes, the Key Lies in the Grains

Researchers recorded sand "singing" in the lab. It can make multiple notes at the same time, a consequence of different-sized grains moving at different speeds.
Researchers recorded sand "singing" in the lab. It can make multiple notes at the same time, a consequence of different-sized grains moving at different speeds.
(Image credit: American Geophysical Union)

In a few places on Earth, sand "sings" as it falls down dunes, making a low droning sound that lies within the bottom half of a cello's musical range.

For centuries the eerie humming in deserts mesmerized visitors such as explorer Marco Polo and scientist Charles Darwin, who couldn't explain the origin of the sound. 

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