Here's the sound I was trying to ID, folks. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/n=
aturerecordists/files/Unknown%20sound.mp3
Bernie
On Apr 18, 2010, at 11:39 AM, Bernie Krause wrote:
> Hi fellas and gals,
>
> Last night, while recording Pacific tree frogs, this happened (look
> for "unidentified sound.mp3") in the audio file listings. Martyn
> thinks I'm pulling some frog legs. But actually, we've heard this
> sucker over the period of a couple of evenings, now. This one occurred
> at around 8:20P when there was still a bit of light left. We live in a
> hilly oak chaparral habitat at about 125m (415 ft). The weather was in
> the high 50s F (about 15C). It was recorded with a 722 and MKH30/40
> and is part of a larger clip (where I was looking at the ways in which
> five frogs that live in close proximity to each other temporally
> partition their voices to successfully vocalize).
>
> Mountain lions have been seen in and around where we live recently.
> And the thought occurred to me it might be a lion alarm scream of some
> kind.
>
> Any thoughts would be most helpful.
>
> Unknown sound.mp3
> Unidentified critter
>
> Bernie Krause
>
>
> Wild Sanctuary
> POB 536
> Glen Ellen, CA 95442
> 707-996-6677
> http://www.wildsanctuary.com
>
> Google Earth zooms: http://earth.wildsanctuary.com
> SKYPE: biophony
>
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> ------------------------------------
>
> "While a picture is worth a thousand words, a
> sound is worth a thousand pictures." R. Murray Schafer via Bernie
> Krause
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
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>
Wild Sanctuary
POB 536
Glen Ellen, CA 95442
707-996-6677
http://www.wildsanctuary.com
Google Earth zooms: http://earth.wildsanctuary.com
SKYPE: biophony
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