The Mammals photograph

The Mammals

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Active from 2001
AlbumsSunshiner
Rock That Babe
Evolver
Born Live
Bootleg Six-Pack
Departure
Instant Classics
I Won't Let You Go
Nonet
GenresFolk Music
Folk Rock
Old-time Music
Americana
Record labels Signature Sounds Recordings
Thirty Tigers
Official site themammals.love
Skos genre Folk
Songs2020
List2020
Members Michael Merenda
Ruth Ungar
Tao Rodríguez‑Seeger
Ken Maiuri
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID998803
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About The Mammals


The Mammals are a contemporary folk rock band based in the Hudson Valley area of New York, in the United States. The band tours internationally and consists of founding members and principal songwriters Mike Merenda and Ruth Ungar plus Konrad Meissner and a rotating cast of players on bass, organ, and pedal steel.

Blue whales: Ocean giants return to 'safe' tropical haven

Blue whales: Ocean giants return to 'safe' tropical haven
Nov 22,2023 10:51 pm

... The Mammals signature, very low frequency song could be heard primarily during March and April...

Dominica to create world's first sperm whale reserve

Dominica to create world's first sperm whale reserve
Nov 14,2023 8:21 am

... Large ships will be required to use designated ocean corridors to avoid disturbing The Mammals...

More than 40 pilot whales dead in mass stranding on Lewis

More than 40 pilot whales dead in mass stranding on Lewis
Jul 16,2023 11:40 am

... About 55 of The Mammals washed onto Traigh Mhor beach at North Tolsta on the Isle of Lewis at about 07:00 on Sunday morning...

Swimmers injured in dolphin attacks on Japan beach

Swimmers injured in dolphin attacks on Japan beach
Jul 16,2023 10:50 am

... Two more people were injured by The Mammals later in the day...

Killer whale boat attack videos might not be what they seem

Killer whale boat attack videos might not be what they seem
Jun 23,2023 7:51 pm

... There s even been a number of reports of The Mammals hitting and sinking vessels...

Why black bears love dumpster diving

Why black bears love dumpster diving
May 3,2023 10:51 pm

... Certain places like Mr Marsh s home state of West Virginia, as well as New Jersey and Tennessee, may be more ripe for bear encounters as they have growing populations of The Mammals, said David Drake, a professor and extension wildlife specialist at the University of Wisconsin...

Northern elephant seals sleep in the deep to avoid predators

Northern elephant seals sleep in the deep to avoid predators
Apr 20,2023 8:50 pm

... The Mammals, which reach depths of up to 2,500ft (760m), sleep for only two hours per day in what the researchers describe as " nap-like sleeping dives"...

The Antarctic and Arctic sounds rarely heard before

The Antarctic and Arctic sounds rarely heard before
Feb 5,2023 8:11 pm

... " The difficulty is knowing where The Mammals will be because they move and you can t rely on where they will be, " explains Dr Whittaker...

The Antarctic and Arctic sounds rarely heard before

Jan 21,2023 3:51 pm

By Georgina RannardClimate and science reporter

What do you hear when you think of The Arctic and Antarctic?

" Singing" ice, a seal that sounds like it is In Space , and a seismic airgun thundering like a bomb are some of the noises released by two marine acoustic labs.

The Project introduces The Public to 50 rarely heard sounds recorded underwater in the Polar Regions .

It highlights how noisy oceans are becoming due to increased human activity that also disrupts Sea Life .

" These sounds are fairly alien to Most People , " explains artist and researcher Dr Geraint Rhys Whittaker.

" We probably think we know what the poles sound like but often that is imagined, " adds Dr Whittaker, who works at the Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity and the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany.

The underwater microphones were attached to floats with scientific instruments left in The Arctic and Antarctic for about two years.

One sound captured was calls from the least-researched Antarctic seal. Ross seals live in the open seas and on pack ice that is difficult to reach. The Scientists recorded five calls from the creature of different frequencies.

Crabeater seals, minke whales, narwhals and Humpback Whales were also recorded.

It can be hard to capture these sounds due to the inhospitable environment and the vast distances that animals travel in the regions.

" The difficulty is knowing where The Mammals will be because they move and you can't rely on where they will be, " explains Dr Whittaker.

The roaring collapse of ice shelves was also recorded, a process that is being accelerated in parts of the Polar Regions by rising temperatures linked to Climate Change .

The delicate sound of ice " singing" is included in The Collection . It is caused by ice moving in water, or contracting as temperatures rise and fall, or when ice melts and refreezes.

Few people read scientific research published by universities, Dr Whittaker suggests, and he hopes that listening to The Sounds will make people stop and think about the Polar Oceans . Oceans occupy 71% of Our Planet 's surface and are hugely important for preserving life on Earth but are severely impacted by Climate Change .

than other parts of The World .

The Microphones also picked up human-made noise in the oceans, caused by shipping and oil and gas exploration.

Noise pollution from seismic blasting, used to explore the seabed, travels huge distances and

The Project reveals just how noisy the oceans are, suggests Dr Whittaker, who says he hopes it highlights the need for laws to reduce noise from shipping and dredging damaging Marine Life .

Working with the sound-art project Cities and Memory, put together by musicians highlighting Climate Change .

" With Earth's poles warming faster than the global average, this collection of sounds aims to draw attention to a fascinating but rapidly changing environment, and encourages us to think about ways to preserve it for Future Generations , " explains Stuart Fowkes, founder of Cities and Memory.

Dr Ilse van Opzeeland, from The Ocean Acoustics Group at Alfred Wegener Institute, hopes combining art and science will help raise awareness.

" A 'translation' through art breathes New Life into our scientific data that goes beyond a traditional publication or policy paper by Making It accessible to non-scientists, " She Said .

" We must make The Greatest efforts to protect, conserve and restore Our Planet 's endangered habitats. The interaction of art and science can help by creating awareness and brings attention to this. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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