News 2019

Research Focus | The Sound of Sand Reveals Its Source

13 Sep 2019
The Scientists Used a Technique called Broad Acoustic Dissolution Spectroscopy Analysis (BARDS).

Lift a shell from the sand to your ear and everyone knows you can hear the sea. But listen carefully enough and you can hear shells in the sand too.

Sand, it turns out, has a signature sound of its own, and now scientists have found a way to tune in. To the untrained eye, one bucket of beach sand looks much like another but mixed into the multitude of microscopic minerals are carbonate chemicals left behind from the shells of long-dead sea creatures such as molluscs. The carbonate concentration varies according to local geology, and Saskia van Ruth, a researcher at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, and her colleagues say this leaves each batch of sand with its own distinctive noise. The results could extend forensic techniques, providing a quick way to determine the source of disputed sand.

The full article featuring the BARDS technique developed by Dr. Dara Fitzpatrick appeared in The Economist on 12th September 2019 and featured as part of the their weekly podcast on the science and technology making the news.

School of Chemistry

Scoil na Ceimic

Second Floor, Kane Building, University College Cork, T12 YN60

Top