Abstract

The marine soundscape, whether in coastal areas or the deepest ocean, in the tropics or at the poles, contains a myriad of sounds. Sounds may be grouped by their origin into geophony (e.g., wind, precipitation, waves, earthquakes, volcanoes, and ice), biophony (e.g., invertebrates, fishes, and marine mammals), and anthropophony (e.g., port construction, mineral and hydrocarbon exploration and production, renewable energy installation, and shipping). This chapter gives a brief overview of the geophony and biophony, and then focuses on the anthropophony. The sounds of boats and ships of various types, marine seismic surveys, drilling, dredging, pile driving, windfarms, geotechnical site investigations, sonars, echosounders, explosions, and acoustic mitigation devices are presented, along with their characteristic source levels and spectra. Approaches to modeling, in particular, the sounds emitted by ships, seismic airguns, and pile driving are discussed.

Document Type

Book Chapter

Date of Publication

1-1-2025

Publication Title

Marine Mammal Acoustics in a Noisy Ocean

Publisher

Springer

School

Centre for Marine Ecosystems Research / School of Science

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Comments

Erbe, C., Duncan, A. J., Gavrilov, A., Landero, M., McCauley, R. D., Parnum, I., Salgado-Kent, C., & Sidenko, E. (2025). Sources of underwater noise. In Marine Mammal Acoustics in a Noisy Ocean (pp. 85–178). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-77022-7_2

First Page

85

Last Page

178

Included in

Oceanography Commons

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1007/978-3-031-77022-7_2