Communicating How has bigfoot communication been researched?

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Communicating How has bigfoot communication been researched?
Posted On: February 14, 2023

Below I pulled from an article that describes other ways certain animals communicate. Given this uniqueness, has there been extensive research into communication with different frequencies? The article even mentions dung being used by rhinos. Could bigfoot leave other types of markings to communicate? .


Technically, elephants make very low sounds to one another. Thing is, they're so low that it does not strike the human ear as a sound—or anything more than a rumbling vibration. Known as "infrasound" (sounds below 20 hertz, too low for humans to detect), this way of communicating may seem quiet to humans, but researchers estimate that one African elephant making an infrasound can be heard by another more than 175 miles away!.


Tarsiers-big-eyed primates living in Southeast Asia communicate at the opposite range of elephants—ultrasound frequencies over 20,000 Hertz that are far too high-pitched for the human ear to detect. Scientists recorded them using similar devices as those used to record bats, capturing their vocalizations at 70,000 Hertz, which is believed to help them communicate over the jungle noise (and out of range of predators), making it ideal for avoiding or alerting one another of danger. By the way, tarsiers are one of the smallest animals in the world.


There are many, many other cool ways that great apes communicate with each other; researchers have isolated some 80 gestures at least. But what may be most interesting is that these significantly overlap with human toddlers; as Smithsonian puts it, "researchers found the human toddlers used 52 discrete gestures to communicate, including clapping, hugging, stomping, raising their arms and shaking their heads, often stringing the moves together to convey complex ideas. It turns out that the chimps also used 46 of the same gestures, meaning there's a 90 percent overlap.".


https://bestlifeonline.com/animal-communication/.


Question from user wolfshield88 at bigfoot at reddit.com.


Answer:

Go down the sierra sounds rabbit hole and you'll find the military linguist talking about their language. It's intriguing.


Answer from user whitey7420 at bigfoot at reddit.com.



[BACK]
Communicating How has bigfoot communication been researched?
Posted On: February 14, 2023

Below I pulled from an article that describes other ways certain animals communicate. Given this uniqueness, has there been extensive research into communication with different frequencies? The article even mentions dung being used by rhinos. Could bigfoot leave other types of markings to communicate? .


Technically, elephants make very low sounds to one another. Thing is, they're so low that it does not strike the human ear as a sound—or anything more than a rumbling vibration. Known as "infrasound" (sounds below 20 hertz, too low for humans to detect), this way of communicating may seem quiet to humans, but researchers estimate that one African elephant making an infrasound can be heard by another more than 175 miles away!.


Tarsiers-big-eyed primates living in Southeast Asia communicate at the opposite range of elephants—ultrasound frequencies over 20,000 Hertz that are far too high-pitched for the human ear to detect. Scientists recorded them using similar devices as those used to record bats, capturing their vocalizations at 70,000 Hertz, which is believed to help them communicate over the jungle noise (and out of range of predators), making it ideal for avoiding or alerting one another of danger. By the way, tarsiers are one of the smallest animals in the world.


There are many, many other cool ways that great apes communicate with each other; researchers have isolated some 80 gestures at least. But what may be most interesting is that these significantly overlap with human toddlers; as Smithsonian puts it, "researchers found the human toddlers used 52 discrete gestures to communicate, including clapping, hugging, stomping, raising their arms and shaking their heads, often stringing the moves together to convey complex ideas. It turns out that the chimps also used 46 of the same gestures, meaning there's a 90 percent overlap.".


https://bestlifeonline.com/animal-communication/.


Question from user wolfshield88 at bigfoot at reddit.com.


Answer:

Go down the sierra sounds rabbit hole and you'll find the military linguist talking about their language. It's intriguing.


Answer from user whitey7420 at bigfoot at reddit.com.



Communicating How has bigfoot communication been researched?

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