Thinking about the way weather and temperatures affect the hum in
disparate ways, I wondered if the mass of air and water we call the
atmosphere could be resonating to cause Hum?
Seeing that lightening strike LF components can travel up to 1000Km at
freqs up to 240 Hz and cause a LF crackle through the medium of air -
why can't water itself resonate if excited by EM activity- and also
just dispersed sound - like I get from the motorway;
This seems to be part of a regular background  Hum like activity, but
not a necessary input when I'm away from the region.
Singing sands are known about ,as each grain rubs on the next, and
this is readily accepted as feasible.

Maybe ,as we need air to breathe and stay alive it's human nature to
concentrate on this prime function -and not think too far in new
directions?
When you think we all have a huge weight of atmospheric pressure
bearing down at 15 psi -the ear would be an easy target for second
order effects- due to its extreme sensitivity , often enhanced at LF
in later years, it seems..

It does seem an obvious candidate for investigation.
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