Sound Mirror on cliffs above Dover at Exploring the Kent Coast (and a bit of E. Sussex) by Sally Swan.
Links
Hidden Teesside
Talking parabolicality
Douglas Butler illustrates how to create an Autograph file to test the parabolicality of a sound mirror, at the Association of Teachers of Mathematics website.
Music from the weather through sound mirrors
Inspired by sound mirrors, someone suggests musicalizing a weather system through landscape architecture.
BLDGBLOG here proposes a series of sound mirrors to be built in a landscape with regular, annual wind phenomena. A distant gully, moaning at 2am every second week in October, every year, due to northern winds from Canada, has its low, droning, cliff-created reverb carefully echoed back up a chain of sound mirrors to supply natural soundscapes for the sleeping residents of nearby towns.
Or a crevasse that actually makes no sound at all has a sound mirror built nearby, which then amplifies and redirects the ambient air movements, coaxing out a tone – but only for the first week of March. Annually.
Sound mirrors on Greatstone website
Greatstone.net has comprehensive information on the village of Greatstone, the home to Sound Mirrors, […] large concrete structures built in the 1920s and 1930s to detect enemy aircraft.
The history section of the website has details of the Denge mirrors, and also the railways and a US bomber which crashed nearby.
Yorkshire sound mirrrors
Zeppelin Early Warning Sound Mirrors at the Yorkshire – God’s Own County blog.
Between a messenger with a stick in Marathon or a Beacon on top of a hill but before Radar and electronic surveillance there was a humble invention the ‘Sound Mirror’.
Though I’m not sure why they have chosen a picture of the Sunderland mirror, rather than one actually in God’s own county!
Abbot’s Cliff sound mirror photo
A photograph of the Acoustic Sound Mirror, Abbot’s Cliff, Dover, Kent, UK taken by Mike Franklin on 15 March, along with other photos of sights between Dover and Folkestone.
The largest ear in Malta
A frequent visitor to Malta, ColorGrinder obtained permission to photograph the 200 ft sound mirror in Malta. His pictures are online at ‘Il Widna’ – The largest ear in Malta. They give a good indication of the surviving camouflage paint.
ColorGrinder also has a post about Tracking down the old Malta Railway.
Crafty Shirley’s Denge mirror photographs
Crafty Shirley’s Photo Gallery – Sound Mirrors By The Sea. Within a short walk of where we live is Lade Pit. At the back of these lakes are the three Listening Devices built in the 1920s and 30s as part of a national early warning system against enemy aircraft.