“There is sufficient
evidence in a tree, a pebble, a grain of sand, a fingerprint, to make us
glorify God and thank Him.”[1]
When I read this last week I thought, “Really? Is there evidence in a grain of sand?” So I did a little research. Not a
lot of research. If you want that, you’re on the wrong blog.
I found out a couple of interesting things. Various
professionals don’t all agree on the definition of sand. What is silt, what is sand,
what is gravel? There are various measurements.
I liked these practical descriptions. “... sand is anything big enough to feel between the fingers and smaller than a match head.”[2] And this one, “sand is anything small enough to be carried by the wind but big enough that it doesn't stay in the air...”[3] Let's leave the size and definition at that.
I liked these practical descriptions. “... sand is anything big enough to feel between the fingers and smaller than a match head.”[2] And this one, “sand is anything small enough to be carried by the wind but big enough that it doesn't stay in the air...”[3] Let's leave the size and definition at that.
I also learned that most sand is quartz, while some is coral fragments or lava. There
are dunes, beaches, and cool sand bars called tombolo. (That’s not a
sandwich) The facts went on.
“Okay, fine,” I
thought, “but this doesn’t make me feel a
need to ‘glorify God and thank Him.’”
Then I read something that got my attention: “Sand also makes music.”[4]
In several parts of the world from California to China a
phenomenon occurs known as “booming dunes” or “sounding sand.” Evidently Marco Polo reported this in the Gobi Desert in the 1200’s,
saying the sands, "at times fill the
air with the sounds of all kinds of musical instruments, and also of drums and
the clash of arms."[5]
As wind blows on the dunes, the dry, topical sands are
blown, sand moves en masse, and the result is sound. The keys of G, E, or F to
be exact. It’s music!
Melanie Hunt of the California Institute of Technology says,
The sound is remarkable because “it is composed of one dominant audible
frequency (70 to 105 Hz) plus several higher harmonics.”[6]
Her team compared this to the music of a cello.[7]
How does this inspire me to praise and thank God?
The Bible says “The wilderness and the desert will be glad,
and the desert will rejoice … with rejoicing and shout of joy…”[8]
The "weeping prophet" Jeremiah wrote, “They have made my pleasant field a desolate
wilderness… Desolate, it mourns before me…”[9] Paul told the Romans, “... we know that the whole creation groans … until now.”[10] And Jesus Himself told his disciples it was possible, “... the stones will cry out.”[11]
Wow.
If the dunes raise a song, then I should praise and thank Him.
[1]
James Montgomery Boice The Sovereign God (Downers
Grove, IL: InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, 1978) 31
[3]
Ibid
[4]
Ibid
[5] Michael
Schirber, Singing Sand Dunes: The Mystery of Desert Music, (11 January
2005) (Internet: http://www.livescience.com/3788-singing-sand-dunes-mystery-desert-music.html
)
[6] Melanie
L Hunt, Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Vice Provost, California Institute
of Technology http://www.hunt.caltech.edu/
[10]
Romans 8:22 New American Standard Bible
[11]
Luke 19:39 New American Standard Bible
This is so incredibly awesome! So wonderful you did the research and then the discovery of something so spectacular. Praise God!
ReplyDeleteLast summer I saw Louie Giglio at Creation. He combined the sound of pulsars, blue whales, and other events in nature... added them together and it made music! I think of the chorus, "All of creation sing with me now, lift up your voice and lay your burden down..." Yeah, praise God!
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