There's very little on line about Hum on your islands Mingo.
It might be worth joining a few local groups/blogs etc to mention the
issue and see if you get a response.
Everyone is too busy surfing, I reckon!
The only mention I saw was of the sea humming- which I've heard of
before.
This due to shingle/sand movements on the sea bed over long distances.
Your freq still seems a bit on the high side for Hum tbh- it normally
seems to be sub 100Hz which puts it straight into mains supply
territory- and its harmonics making resolution even harder.
At the higher freq, you have at least, a better chance of recording
it- if you can give that a try.

On May 11, 10:00 am, [email protected] wrote:
> On May 11, 8:14 am, Robert Domingos <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > still going . . my error, it's not A 440, it's A 220, the A below middle
> > C, oscillating down to the E below it, randomly flipping between the two
> > pitches. Is it the lava?  is it the sea?  is it the sky?
>
> > mingo
>
> Two tones randomly fluctuating, or flipping as you say. Now where have
> I heard that before? All over actually, the same Hum phenomenon that
> you **hear* in Hawaii is global, and here in NE London UK it's been
> off to very low recently, with a slight increase last night. It's not
> natural, it's man made, a transmission of sorts.
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