Yes, the Earth has a faint, continuous seismic pulse that occurs roughly every 26 seconds, but its exact cause is a scientific mystery. This phenomenon is a persistent, low-frequency vibration that is detected by seismic stations globally, though its origin is thought to be in the southern Atlantic Ocean.
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Yes, the Earth has a faint, continuous seismic pulse that occurs roughly every 26 seconds, but its exact cause is a scientific mystery. This phenomenon is a persistent, low-frequency vibration that is detected by seismic stations globally, though its origin is thought to be in the southern Atlantic Ocean.
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“Yes, the Earth has a faint, continuous seismic pulse that occurs roughly every 26 seconds, but its exact cause is a scientific mystery. This phenomenon is a persistent, low-frequency vibration that is detected by seismic stations globally, though its origin is thought to be in the southern Atlantic Ocean.,” Lawrence Catania's Omeka, accessed June 11, 2026, https://www.omeka.lawrencecatania.com/items/show/4278.