Who are we?
We are dolphin researchers based in Hawaii working under the name
The Sirius Institute. Our founding partner is Paradise Newland and
our research director is Michael T. Hyson, Ph.D., a neurobiologist.
Paradise was a close friend and colleague of the late Dr. John C.
Lilly, M.D., and Toni Lilly, who pioneered communication with the
dolphins.
Michael was a close friend and colleague of the late Dr. Hank Truby,
a linguist and acoustic phonetician who helped invent the sonogram
or "voice printing". He worked closely with Lilly and his
dolphin projects for 17 years, including attempts to teach dolphins
Elvar and Tolva English. We are inheritors of this tradition and have
built on this legacy.
We have many partners and associates, biologists, MD's, engineers,
midwives, doulas, architects and others that help us in this work.
How did you get interested in the dolphins?
I became interested when I was 12-13 after reading John Lilly's books
Man & Dolphin and Mind of the Dolphin. Then I got a chance to
be with them at a facility in Texas the next summer. So dolphins have
been in my life since then. I even got to swim with the original Flipper,
a dolphin named Mitzi.
Later, I met Dr. Hank Truby at the University of Miami and worked
with him on dolphin and other projects for about 12 years, including
a project of the World Dolphin Foundation with the dolphins Florida
and Liberty.
I met Paradise Newland at Dr. Lilly's 75th birthday in 1990 and we
have been running her Sirius Institute together ever since. This brought
us to Hawaii to study the free dolphins and whales here and establish
Human-Dolphin Habitats and dolphin attended underwater birthing centers.
What is the Sirius Institute?
Sirius Institute is a tax-exempt consortium with the purpose of "dolphinizing"
the planet. This means the integration of the Cetacea (dolphins and
whales) into our culture. A second goal is the "humanization
of space" which involves the settlement of the solar system and
beyond.
We can integrate the Cetacea with us through direct interactions,
by communication through interfaces and translators, using dolphin
attended underwater childbirth, raising our children together with
the Cetacea, developing dolphin assisted therapy, and by legal recognition
of their rights under human law through the Cetacean Commonwealth.
The dolphins and whales are co-species with us on our planet and we
can all benefit from this recognition.
Our website is at: www.planetpuna.com
Just follow the links to the Sirius Institute and we have pretty
extensive documentation.
Those interested can email us at siriusinstitute@yahoo.com or write
us at
Box 1645 Pahoa, Hawaii 96778
or call us at 808-965-9667
If you are inspired to support our work, please do. We have a Paypal
account under planetpuna@yahoo.com and a link from our website. All
gifts are tax-deductible.
We would also like people to sign up for our Cetacean Commonwealth.
Please contact us and give us your input in all this. There are people,
I m sure, with expertise in many areas, that could help in this work.
If they are interested in helping there is much to do. We especially
want a legal team to make their case for recognition before the United
Nations.
Why did you choose the name Sirius?
Paradise reply -
This is the name that came to me soon after my swim with dolphins
Joe and Rosie and Roberta Goodman, through the Human/Dolphin Foundation,
in March 1985. It was incorporated in Vancouver, B.C. as the Sirius
Connection (now Sirius Connection 420). It was a vehicle for my projects
and works regarding these amazing beings that had come to my life.
I wanted to share so much with the world as I found out more and more
about them.
Hyson Reply -
There are several ancient cultures that say they learned the arts
of civilization from amphibious beings from the star system Sirius.
Sirius Institute is named in honor of these legends. The dolphins
and the whales have indeed been a civilizing influence on humans for
ages.
Why do you feel "dolphinizing" the planet is important?
The Cetacea, the dolphins and whales, are highly intelligent, self
aware beings that use sonic "tools" and transmit information
through their cultures. They are mammals who birth and raise their
young as we do, suckling them with milk.
Most Cetacea have brains larger than ours (up to 6 times larger for
the Sperm Whale). They have had brains equal to or larger than ours
for at least 15-30 million years (at least 2 times longer than our
entire accepted evolutionary history as the genus Homo).
It is known that the dolphins (and presumably the other Cetacea)
have a complex language - with up to a trillion "words"
possible using at least 4 simultaneous sound sources.
Therefore, we conclude that they are more intelligent than we are
and have all the characteristics we generally use to define our status
as human, i.e. self-awareness, intelligence, language, tool use, culture
etc.
This suggests that the Cetacea have knowledge and experience that
can be important to our understanding of our planet, its history,
and who we are on it. We feel it is important to communicate with
them and learn from them.
The realization that the Cetacea are the oldest and most intelligent
cultures on Earth leads to the conclusion that we must respect them,
and insure their wellbeing. This implies changes in current policy
at all levels.
What we will learn in this process is an exciting, open question-
who ARE these beings who share our planet? How can we cooperate with
them? What are their goals, needs, wants?
OK, so we know they have big brains, so what? They have big bodies,
so maybe they need these brains just to run their large bodies?
Studies by John Lilly, Peter Morgane and others have shown that the
brains of the Cetacea are comparable in complexity and quality to
our own. The parts of the brain that run the body are actually about
the same size as ours. Lilly found that the major expansion in the
size of the brain is in the neo-cortex (the "new" brain).
This is the part of the brain that handles consciousness, personality
and thinking in humans.
Therefore, the expansion of the Cetacean brain is in those areas
that are concerned with high level thinking, the so-called "association"
areas. Even a bottlenosed dolphin has 40% more association cortex
than a human. The Orca (so-called "killer" whale) has three
times our brain size and others have even larger brains.
Since we know that larger brains have more cells, and more connections,
they can also be more intelligent.
Why do the whales need such large brains?
We can turn this question around and say, "Why do they need
large bodies?"
It turns out that the larger the brain, the easier it is damaged,
especially by accelerations. To have a large brain, you MUST have
a large body to protect it. Lilly calculated the body size needed
to protect a given brain size and found out that humans, elephants,
dolphins, whales - all have the LARGEST brains they CAN have for their
body size.
This suggests that maximization of the neocortex has been a major
evolutionary driver in humans, elephants and marine mammals.
It also means that since the elephant has a body that is near maximum
size for a land creature made of bone and muscle, that if you want
to have a brain much larger than an elephant, then you MUST move to
the water or somehow reduce gravity.
And this appears to be what the Cetacea did - they evolved on land
and eventually adapted to the water. Once there, the limits to their
brain size were removed, and over time, their brains increased in
size to what we see now - which is that they have the largest brains
on the planet.
You say the Cetacea are self-aware. How do we know this?
We know that the dolphins, for sure, are self aware through the studies
of Dr. Ken Marten of Earth Trust working at Sea Life Park in Hawaii.
Basically, they put dye splotches on the dolphins and then provided
a mirror. They observed that the dolphins recognized themselves in
the mirror and used it to look at the dye splotches.
Therefore, they understand mirror images and that they were looking
at their own image. This is only seen in humans and other great apes.
Since the other Cetacea have even larger brains, we conclude that
they are self-aware as well.
GO TO TOP
You say the dolphins and other Cetacea have language. How
do we know this?
Dolphins and whales make complex sounds like the songs of the humpback
whale. Dolphins have at least 4 and possibly 5 separate sound sources,
the 4 nasopharynges in the passages of their blowholes, and perhaps
one source in the throat similar to our vocal cords. With these they
make sounds from about 1000 cycles/second out to at least 280,000
cycles/second. The sounds range from whistles and clicks, rasping
sounds, creaking sounds and all combinations of these. Dolphins can
make at least 4 simultaneous sounds all different, such as 4 click
trains, 4 whistles, or combinations of these.
Russian researchers Markov and Ostrakaya analyzed some 300,000 dolphin
sounds and concluded that they form a language with some 10^12 or
1 trillion syntactic units (roughly "words") in contrast
to the largest human vocabularies of about 50,000 words.
While we have yet to learn what the sounds mean beyond simple "signature
whistles" or distress calls, the Russian work found the vocalizations
follow Ziff*s laws. For example, in all languages and computer codes
analyzed, short "words" are more common than long words
in the ratio of 1/f. The Russians showed that the dolphin sounds followed
this pattern, and concluded it IS a language.
In addition, work by Lilly's team showed that the dolphins imitated
English using their blowholes in air and were able to accurately repeat
phrases of syllables and were conversational - waiting for the human
to speak, and then speaking back.
Louis Herman and co-workers have shown that the dolphins can understand
a synthetic signaling system of hand signs. They learned to understand
some 300 signs in some 2000 combinations.
Dr. Wayne Batteau taught dolphins some 40 words in Hawaiian some
50 years ago. Regretfully, Dr. Batteau died during the study, which
was then transferred to the Navy and the program has been largely
secret since.
All in all, the dolphins have done better in language tests than
primates like chimps and gorillas. In particular, they understand
"word order grammars" in which meaning is contained in the
word order. For example: "Go get the green ball with the red
stripe" in contrast to "Get the red ball with the green
stripe". These distinctions are apparently beyond the capability
of primates other than humans.
Dolphins communicate extensively given the opportunity. Lilly observed
that dolphins isolated in separate tanks and with an audio link between
them would communicate for 23 hours out of 24 for days.
So, we conclude that they have a language and use it. Lilly said
that all Cetacea could communicate with each other.
It seems that with all this capability and larger brains,
perhaps the dolphins might do some things better than humans. Is this
the case?
Yes. Their hearing range is greater than ours - some 280KHz vs 20KHz.
They are supremely adapted to the water, can dive to 1000 feet, leap
20 feet into the air, swim up to 35 knots. Compared to a human who
is almost blind and deaf in the water and can hardly swim, the dolphins
have larger brains, and a longer evolutionary history.
In addition, the short term memory in humans is 5 (plus or minus
2) items, so that we can hold, say, a 7 digit telephone number in
memory long enough to dial it. Dolphins have a short term memory of
12 items, more than twice the humans. As we described earlier, their
language is more complex than ours with a possible trillion words.
They also use their sonar in marvelous ways, sometimes to heal us.
This shows remarkable insight into our structures and the intelligence
and capability to heal even members of other species.
You mention dolphin healing. Tell us more about that.
For years now, there have been studies and stories showing that dolphins
can improve or sometimes heal humans with their sounds and other means,
like electrical fields (which we will discuss in a bit).
My mentor Dr. Hank Truby started this effort by taking two autistic
children to see the dolphins in Miami Seaquarium about 1973. Even
on this first trial, the attention span of the children went from
about 5 minutes to about an hour and a half, and the children, normally
withdrawn and solitary, were cooperating in games, and feeding the
dolphins. Some of the improvement persisted and lead to studies by
Betsy Smith, David Nathanson and others.
Now there are several dolphin assisted therapy projects that are
showing improvements in a wide range of conditions like autism, Down*s
syndrome, cerebral palsy, microcephaly, angina, and perhaps healing
tumors. The field is caisted Therapy.
Much of this still needs more study and medical follow-up. This is
often difficult to obtain, especially when free dolphins do this.
One example is a fellow that had a head injury that eliminated his
peripheral vision. While in the water with the dolphins off Kauai,
they sonared him and his vision came back while he was in the water.
It sure would be nice to record and document what they do in more
controlled and complete ways. I know that they are able to heal through
personal experience, when a dolphin called Dreamer fixed my neck.
What happened with your neck?
When I was 12, I compressed the 6th and 7th cervical vertebrae hitting
a swimming pool wall in a dive. I was mostly OK afterward, but my
neck would sometimes lock up and I could always hear a grinding sound
when I turned by neck.
When I was 40 and swimming with the Dolphin Dreamer at Dolphins Plus
in Key Largo, Florida, I heard and felt some 20 loud and tightly focused
sonar pulses all over my head and neck in about a second.
An hour later, the muscles on the left side of my neck relaxed, several
places along my back got hot as the blood circulation changed and
then I felt and heard 3 vertebrae click and move into new positions.
When I moved m; When I moved my neck, it was looser and the grinding
sound that had been there since I was 12 was gone.
How do you think Dreamer did that?
After thinking and studying this for years, I think we now have at
least some idea how she could do this. First, her sonar could put
out a peak power near a kilowatt, or about a horsepower. Because of
the high frequencies and the 4 sound sources, this could be focused
to under a millimeter. This is enough energy to polish bone.
Since this happened, I learned that the melon, a lens of oil just
under the dolphin's forehead, is piezo-electric, like a quartz crystal.
This means that when it is vibrated with sound, it will generate electromagnetic
fields. These were measured by Dr. Eldon Byrd and Dean Rawlings.
So the dolphins can produce powerful sound AND electric fields. There
is data on the many effects high intensity sound and electricity have
on our bodies. So, I think that is basically how she healed my neck.
These mechanisms can account for many of the healings that are reported.
So the dolphins apparently use sound and electrical effects to heal
us? How does that work, do you think?
There are lots of things that could be going on. Dr. Steven Birch
showed that dolphin sounds could change the frequency and power of
the brain waves and by a process called entrainment, could release
endorphins. Basically, parts of our bodies are piezo-electric Vibrations
of bone and collagen, for example, generate electric currents. The
dolphin sounds vibrating the body can cause this. In addition, the
sounds can resonate body structures and effect them directly.
As I detailed in chapter 12 of Dr. Len Horowitz*s new book called
"Pirates of the Sacred Spiral" it is possible that dolphin
sounds can cause micro-bubble formation in the tissues. This has been
shown to speed bone healing.
In addition, it is known that medical ultrasound can also change
the DNA by activating or turning off different genes. So the dolphins
could do the same sort of things with their sounds.
Dr. Ross Adey showed that pulsed electrical fields could activate
or "turn on" specific genes. So the dolphin electrical fields
could do similar things to our DNA.
So, we now know that both electrical currents and sound can change
DNA expression and that the dolphins could do this.
To know how this all works will require more research with the dolphins.
What other areas have the dolphins proved helpful?
Dolphins are playful, happy creatures. Just being around them can
be a transforming experience. We have talked to many people who*s
lives have been changed by their presence. One example is Dr. Horace
Dobbs who took a manic depressive patient that had been on medication
for 14 years to see the free dolphin Donald in Britain. The man felt
he had been given a new lease on life and stopped his medication and
was much more joyful after seeing the dolphins.
We have reports of a young girl aged 8 with cerebral palsy whose
mental age of performance went from 3-6 months to 3-4 years after
being with the dolphins.
Another report is that a child with Down s syndrome was performing
normally after a few weeks of swimming with the dolphins.
One of the most dramatic reports is that a child with microcephaly
(where the skull plates in a way that will make too small a skull)
was improved by being with the dolphins for about a week. It was reported
that after being with 4 dolphins who "ensonified" the child
with sounds for 20 minutes a day, the skull plates developing normally
after about a week. There are similar stories for many different conditions
where the dolphins appear able to help.
These reports inspire us that there should be a concerted, well funded
effort to explore the dolphins and their healing abilities. As Scott
Taylor, who reported the microcephaly story to me said: "This
will change the face of medicine".
GO TO TOP
What has been our association with dolphins in the past?
Many ancient cultures likely had close association with the Cetacea.
For example, there were river dolphins in the Nile, the Ganges, the
Indus and the Yangtze rivers. These are where all the early "hydraulic"
cultures developed. So it is possible that dolphins influenced our
cultures. In several cases it is reported that the dolphins helped
guide ships, and helped people fish. Polynesian stories report that
the dolphins and the whales helped guide the canoes from island to
island.
In ancient Greece, dolphins were said to be the highest form of life.
The oracle at Delphi (which means "dolphin") was a guiding
influence for at least 2000 years. There are stories of the dolphins
rescuing the harper Arion, taking children to school and playing with
children and people on the shore, as has happened in modern times.
One of the most instructive stories is by Pliny the Elder, who wrote
that dolphins helped some Greek fishermen by chasing fish into their
nets. At the end of the day, the dolphins hung by the docks and the
fishermen gave them "bread soaked in wine" as a reward.
Greek wine was used as a carrier for drugs and psychedelics. So the
fishermen were sharing their sacramental potions with the dolphins.
This suggests that human-dolphin relations in the past were sacred
and intimate.
Going into the past further, Dr. Solly Zuckerman and Elaine Morgan
have explored what is called the Aquatic Ape Theory. They point out
that we have marine characteristics like the shape of the nose (adapted
for diving), subcutaneous fat (for insulation), a loss of hair, the
position of the breasts (that is ideal for suckling in the water)
and even our tear glands (which are like nidmental glands in sea creatures
that excrete salt). Our ability to swim and dive is rare in primates.
They suggest that our ancestors evolved on rivers and beaches where
we learned to swim and learned to walk while wading.
The usual story is that we learned to run and hunt on the savannahs
of Africa during a long drought. This theory has now been questioned
in part because the plant fossil records show that our early evolution
happened in moist, forested areas, by beaches and rivers.
It now appears likely that we evolved from swamp and beach living
Bonobo chimp-like ancestors. Recently we have learned that proper
brain development requires eicosanoic acid which is present in fish
and sea food. If we only evolved from fruit eating, tree living ancestors,
this is quite difficult to explain.
Another puzzle of our evolution is our large brain. How did it happen?
Current models suggest that having a well fed existence near the shore
with an abundance of seafood could be a factor. Being on the beaches
forms a better context for this development. My view is that all the
large brained creatures are aquatic or semi-aquatic. Even the elephants
(that have brains larger than ours) have been seen 25 miles at sea
swimming between islands.
We would suggest, that like the modern people in Mauritania, Australia,
the Amazon and elsewhere who still fish with the dolphins, our ancient
ancestors did the same. It is easy to see that being with the dolphins
like this for years could have stimulated our intelligence.
So our association with the dolphins and whales goes back a long
way. What has happened since the ancient Greeks?
Somewhere along the way, we seem to have mostly forgotten our ancient
relationship and we have been hunting the whales and the dolphins
for food for at least the last 18,000 years. With the development
of modern sailing and powered ships and inventions like the exploding
harpoon, we have killed so many whales that they are now reduced to
something like 1% of their former populations. Some 2 million dolphins
a year are now killed by humans and their pollution and sonars.
We want to change this by helping us remember the relationships we
once had. In the modern era, John Lilly taught us the truth about
the dolphins, starting with examining their large brains and ending
with teaching them English with some success, and then developing
the Janus Project, a computer communication interface that would allow
them to speak English through what is called a vocoder and speech
synthesizer. This work has to be completed and extended.
The Russians, for example, were so impressed by Lilly s data on
the dolphins that they stopped all killing of dolphins based on their
consciousness and intelligence. It is important to remember what we
already know and apply it to our behaviour and policy.
We now have mostly a moratorium on killing the large whales, although
Japan, Norway and Iceland want to resume whaling, despite the International
Whaling Commission ban. And mostly the protections of the IWC have
yet to be extended to the smaller whales and dolphins. They are still
being killed in fishing or being herded and killed in Japan and elsewhere.
So we still have a lot of education to do and changes to be made.
We hope our work and the work of many people around the planet will
awaken us all to the reality of the Cetacea and who they are.
Dolphins always seem friendly. Do they ever hurt people?
For thousands of years the historic record includes their aid to
us, fishing, for us, rescuing people, and playing with us. There are
perhaps 3 instances on record where a Cetacean may have contributed
to a human death. So rare as to be almost in the noise. And, from
what we know, dolphins treat people with kindness except under extreme
provocation. They are harmonious and peaceful in their pods and treat
us similarly. Certainly there have been a few situations where people
have been bitten, or ribs broken, etc. yet this is extremely rare.
Lilly said that the most important thing he learned about the dolphins
was they were ethical in their behavior and treated people as a special
class, being very nice to us.
Tell us more about your goals. How can dolphinizing the planet,
as you call it, benefit us?
We have a comprehensive approach to improved ways of being on this
planet.
We are developing ways to create more harmonious communities by improving
birth and child rearing practices.
Much of the work is inspired by what we have learned investigating
the Cetacea. The dolphins are directly involved and we seek to integrate
them into our lives through communication, birth, therapy and other
means.
Dolphinization has many aspects including establishing communication,
sharing life experiences as well as creating means to allow them to
assist in birth and therapy with us. Our main projects are:
POD Homes
Human-Dolphin Habitats & DAWN Birth Centers
The Songswimmer Communication interfaces &
Interspecies Concerts
The Cetacean Commonwealth & Embassies
For a more complete description of these projests, please see:
www.planetpuna.com/VOD19
What are POD Homes?
Cetacean societies are cooperative and fun-loving. We want to emulate
that in human society. Closeness and support of a Pod is essential
in the sea, where predators or dangers can come from many directions.
Everyone has to watch out for the others. Cetacea are close, social
creatures, like humans, and thrive best when they share life, love,
food, child rearing, hunting, socialization skills and their culture
with each other.
We can emulate the cooperation and closeness that dolphins have in
their pods and adapt this to our life on land. We call it "living
en Pod" and it occurs in Pod Homes. The Pod model can help us
to restore our currently fragmented society. To live 'en pod' means
that you know you are part of something good and bigger than yourself
that is there for you always. Being part of a pod means you are valued
and accepted for being you and bringing your own special self to the
pod, making it richer and more interesting.
Pod children are raised or spend time in 'pod' homes, centered around
the well being of the children, just like the dolphins. The people
who live here are called a podlet. There are aunties and uncles, grandma's
and granddads, sisters, brothers and good friends too. Even if your
own mom or dad is away, there can be a mom or dad person there for
you.
Pod homes are islands of stability where people gather to help each
other, care for the children, give hugs and other kinds of 'yummy
touch' like touching hands, feet, shoulders, ears, giving back rubs.
This is the kind of touch that everyone can enjoy and helps us stay
well.
When we are part of podlife, things are lots of fun and we feel closer
and at ease with many people, creating organization and activities
so that all of us prosper in harmony and abundance.
GO TO TOP
What are Human-Dolphin Habitats?
We intend to set up areas we call Human-Dolphin Habitats where we
can learn to attract the free dolphins to come play and interact with
us. Then we can learn together. This will be a place where we can
learn to communicate better. We intend to birth our children underwater
with the dolphins in attendance.
Dolphins may choose to heal people. At first we will observe what
the dolphins do, and measure the sounds, electric fields and other
parameters until we understand what they are doing. Then we can duplicate
their methods and improve the state of healing.
The Human-Dolphin Habitat can be a coastal area where the dolphins
come to meet and interact with us. We have located several places
suitable to this effort. We can also interact with the dolphins at
local beaches, here in Puna and Hilo, both from the shore and by boat.
A prototype of the Human-Dolphin Habitat was created during the Lilly
projects where they flooded a house and Margaret Howe and Peter dolphin
lived together for months. We also envision and are planning to have
boats and floating facilities as habitats.
In our studies we have found ways to approach our optimal state through
the human-dolphin habitats. We can improve birth practices, have more
play and fun included in our lives, have our sovereignty and liberty
respected, and we will learn to communicate clearly, both with each
other and the dolphins. The dolphins can assist us in all these areas.
We show a potential area that is close to what we envision. See:
www.planetpuna.com/hdh
Your research suggests that we can improve how we birth babies. What
effects could be expect from this?
Many years of work in the Black Sea and elsewhere, including early
Hawaii, have shown that water birth is beneficial. With their therapeutic
capability the dolphins can help insure an optimal birth.
The birth experience is fundamental to the quality of our children's
future lives. It is now known that underwater birth is often better
for the mother and the baby.
This is established by some 30 years of work starting with Igor Charkofsky,
Dr. Michel Odent, M.D., Estelle Meyers, Dr. Gowri Motha, M.D. and
others. In fact, birthing with the dolphins has been an ancient indigenous
practice here and in other cultures. Such births were done up till
at least 1937 by Hawaiians.
It is therefore evident that underwater birth with the dolphins is
an obvious and important area of research and development. Since the
outcomes in adulthood are so closely linked to the birth experience,
we know that improvement at this stage of a child's life is most important.
We can easily reduce the future consequences and costs of health
care and reduce needs for police and the like just by insuring proper
birth and rearing especially of those considered high risk. Compared
to the alternative of leaving the situation alone, it is more socially
beneficial and cost effective.
There has yet to be a facility, anywhere on Earth that easily allows
such births.
Therefore, we are developing the Dolphin Attended, Water, Natural
(DAWN) and Gentle Birth Centers here in Hawai'i. This is one of the
few places (along the Puna Coastline) where underwater birth with
the free dolphins can be done. The mild climate, the year-round availability
of free dolphins, as well as the Hawaiian cultural milieu are supportive
of this effort. We have been here for some 13 years renewing the groundwork
for all this. The Sirius Institute is in a wonderful position to accomplish
this.
We are now receiving up to 3-4 requests per week through the Internet
from people searching for a place to birth with dolphins. People who
are deeply called to be with the dolphins search widely and find us.
This indicates there is a larger population who want dolphin-attended
births that are off the net or otherwise miss finding us. This demonstrates
there is a need for such a facility. It is time to provide one.
What is the Wellness Begets Wellness Program?
The DAWN Birth Centers are part of our "Wellness begets Wellness"
program which is about systematically, intentionally, intelligently
and consciously setting about to create and provide what it takes
to assure that every child that we can reach, everyone about to be
a mom is hanaied (Hawaiian for adopted), and is included as a member
of the 'pod', a dolphin/whale term that relates to how they live together
and raise their children, from which we are learning a great deal.
We know much about pregnancy and birth, infancy and early childhood
development, that we could apply to every child born here from this
day on so they would have an optimal start in life and thereby a much
better likelihood for a better life in general. This in turn would
result in more benefit to themselves, to their relationships, to their
ability to be productive, balanced members of society and also pass
these qualities to their children.
Our birthing centers address these kinds of births for the well being
of our children and our future. See: www.planetpuna.com/gentlebirth/
What is the Cetacean Commonwealth?
The Cetacean Commonwealth is a commonwealth of the Cetacea Nations
comprising all species of Cetacea, the mammalian order of whales and
dolphins and the Humans who support them in being recognized as a
People. The Cetacean Commonwealth was established March 7, 2002, at
1:34 AM Pacific time and publicly introduced at Earth Day Los Angeles
on 4-20-02.
The Cetacean Commonwealth is a way for the people of the sea and
the people of the land that support them to have a voice and gain
rights for the Cetacea under human laws so they are recognized as
the sentient intelligent beings they are.
It is now scientifically proven that the dolphins are self-aware,
a trait shared with humans. Since other Cetacea have even larger brains,
we conclude that the other Cetacea are self-aware as well. They transmit
information culturally across generations and are the longest lived
of all species. They have the largest brains, include the largest
creatures on Earth and have a long history of friendship, cooperation
and partnership with humans which makes us co-species, sharing the
planet.
They therefore qualify as a people and with their intelligence, culture,
and sentience, are entitled to full recognition under human laws.
It is a major intention of the Sirius Institute to have the Cetacean
Commonwealth recognized so that the Cetacea have standing under human
law. It will take work by attorneys and others.
A milestone for the project will be a presentation by the Cetacea
before the UN with live communications from them where they speak
for themselves.
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What is the SongSwimmer Communication Interface?
The SongSwimmer is a whale & dolphin communication Interface
based on music.
The Cetacea have a complex language that has proven opaque to analysis
so far. Therefore, to communicate it is best to establish an intermediate
code that will allow us to start communicating with each other.
We have learned that part of their communication is musical. They
use chords and musical phrases. Humpback groups, for example, sing
in different keys, and respond to musicians that are playing in their
key.
So, the communication interface that we are developing is based on
a device that tracks the pitch of their whistles and converts them
to MIDI form (Musical Industry Digital Interface) which is used in
keyboards and synthesizers.
Now, Hawaiian language is composed from only 14 basic sounds, the
lowest number of sounds in human languages. We can create an interface
that assigns one of 14 tones to each language sound, or "phoneme".
Then, when the dolphins whistle one of these tones, its pitch will
be recognized by the computer which then outputs the appropriate sound,
both in the air to the humans, and through underwater speakers. It
will also display the appropriate letters on a computer screen, both
for the humans and the Cetacea.
Thus, by whistling sequences of these 14 tones, the dolphins can
"speak" Hawaiian, for example. English, by the way, would
require about 48 tones, and it is possible for the dolphins could
learn this more complex coding too.
So this is one way the dolphins and the whales can learn to speak
with us. When we do this, the dolphins will have an objective and
recordable way to speak with us.
We envision a sound operated computer for the dolphins which will
be a teaching machine so that the dolphins can teach US what THEY
want us to know.
To accomplish goals like the Cetacean Commonwealth, we need this
kind of two-way communication with the Cetacea. This was a major goal
of Lilly's Janus Project through the Human/Dolphin Foundation. This
will complete John Lilly's work.
The SongSwimmer will allow us to communicate and begin learning from
each other. Demonstration of this ability will support their recognition
as sentient beings under the Cetacean Commonwealth and educate many
people about their intelligence.
We have tested underwater speakers of our own design, have hydrophones,
and "pitch to MIDI" converters. A binaural hydrophone is
designed and ready to be built and tested. The pitch to MIDI conversion
has been tested on taped dolphin & Orca sounds and live with humpbacks,
and the whales were playing with the interface. We have a CD called
Cetacea - the Whales and Dolphins Sing demonstrating this.
(We could play part of our CD here, showing the conversion of the
dolphin sounds to MIDI music and the Humpbacks interacting with the
interface at sea)
Our current device is low-cost, works in our audio range, and uses
off-the-shelf components. It is adequate for one or two cooperative
Cetacea willing to put up with its limitations.
So far, pitch trackers track only one frequency and can be easily
confused with many parts at once. It is now possible to do the signal
processing in software and improve the frequency response, better
source localization.
Since one dolphin can create at least 4 sounds, all different, at
the same time, out to perhaps 1 Million Hz frequencies, we will need
better processing to fully match their capability.
What are Interspecies Concerts?
Interspecies concerts are joint Human & Cetacean musical compositions
& recordings. Part of Cetacean communication is musical and we
have determined that the Harrison/Lucy scale is a good descriptor
of their sounds. Humpbacks sing in and recognize different keys. Orca
pods use musical phrasing unique to their pod etc. This brings us
to the Interspecies Concert.
Using our SongSwimmer interface we will arrange that the Cetacea
can sing for us. We will convert their own sounds to instrumental
sounds and broadcast them into the water through underwater speakers.
Human musicians will play along with this, and will also be heard
by the Cetacea. This will be a joint artistic creation of the Cetacea
and Humans, showing their
creativity and ability as musicians. Our friend Kendall performed
a version of this idea and some 10 humpbacks and 20 dolphins came
near the shore and listened. One possible result of this activity
is a hit recording.
What are WiFi Whale & Dolphin Communication Stations?
A first step to our communication and concert goals is the establishment
of two-way communications stations. Basically, one puts hydrophones
and underwater speakers on a buoy offshore to pick up and transmit
whale sounds by wireless means to the Internet.
An example is the Whalesong Project at: www.whalesong.net. We are
in contact with them and they are willing to help us as they did this
past Earth Day. We played humpback whale songs live through them for
the first time ever at an Earth Day celebration. Our visi0n is to
have whales/dolphins sing live for many Earth Day events next year
and beyond.
We would like to place such buoys at Kehena Beach and near Richardson's
Beach in Hilo. Our vision is to have many stations. They open up several
possibilities, among them the chance for the whales to use them to
communicate with each other. We can then listen in and learn.
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The Navy has been using new kinds of sonar that some say
are hurting the whales and dolphins. What do you think about that?
The navies of the world are in the midst of an arms race under the
sea. They are developing dangerous new weapons based on what is called
super-cavitation which
allows rocket torpedoes to travel 200 miles/hour plus under the sea.
There are now quieter submarines, e.g. hydrogen peroxide powered that
have 4000 mile ranges and so on. This has everyone nervous.
They are developing all this and now want better sonars to find each
other s forces at long range. So the Low Frequency Active Sonar (LFAS)
has been developed to detect quiet subs at about 100 miles range.
To do this, it is immensely loud ... about 240 decibels or dB, roughly
3 megawatts of acoustic energy.
(Each 3dB increase is 10 times louder, something like the Richter
scale for
earthquakes). For example, 130 dB in air is painful, and at about
the same level, whales and dolphins show responses that suggest it
is painful for them as well.
Several strandings in the Mediterranean Sea, the Bahamas, Hawaii,
and elsewhere show us, at least, that this is a dangerous system.
Whales and dolphins seem to be harmed and killed at sound levels of
150-155 dB. Yet the US Navy has insisted that 180 dB is a safe level,
despite reports of their own divers being harmed by these levels.
The existing sonars, the so-called mid-range sonars, also seem to
be harming the whales and dolphins, for example, there was a stranding
of Melon Headed whales in Kauai recently associated with naval maneuvers
that included mid-range sonars. The Navy originally denied the connection,
yet there is growing data that these sonars hurt things.
Many of the strandings over the last decades that were thought mysterious
link to naval testing, or geological and oil exploration with explosives,
gas guns and the like.
Some of the autopsies of the whales involved in these deaths show
bleeding behind the brain in an area called the ret'e, bleeding in
the ears, the cochlea, in the brain and around the eyes. This is consistent
with shock wave damage.
So I speculate that a super-cavitation device may have hurt them,
or we have other means for making powerful shock waves in the water.
I think it is possible that the current LFAS could be configured as
a phased array sound weapon using a technique called Time-Reversed
Acoustics. This is powerful technology that must be stopped or closely
controlled.
Simply put, we are producing loud and increasingly lethal sound levels
in the oceans. We have to stop.
Federal Judge Laporte has the Navy LFAS project under a restraining
order for the moment based on an NRDC suit. Lanny Sinkin, an attorney
in Hawaii is seeking to get the Cetacea recognized as parties to a
suit, along the lines of our Cetacean Commonwealth. We shall see what
happens.
Admirals have testified that there are benign, quiet alternatives
to all this involving so-called passive sonar which basically uses
signal processing to detect targets without the need of making loud
sounds. This would be a lot safer than what we are doing now.
Still, Britain, the Netherlands, NATO countries, Russia ... at least
12 nations are developing similar systems. This has to stop very soon
if we are to have oceans with whales dolphins and fish reasonably
intact.
For a more complete report on these matters, please see: Our letter
to the National Marine Fisheries Service at: www.planetpuna.com/MayLetter
What changes in society and the planet would you like to
see when all this happens?
For the longest time, we have thought in Western culture that we
were the pinacle of evolution. Now we know differently. There are
other conscious beings here that are more intelligent and have been
here longer than we have as a species. These beings have always and
continue to offer their cooperation and to show us about themselves.
In some cases offer full friendship and partnership.
It is time for humanity to embrace this offer and meet the Cetacea
with the finest we have. I think we will learn about how to make ourselves
better through better birth practices. We will learn a lot by communicating
with other intelligent species as we partner with them in birth, play,
music and other forms of interaction.
We will recognize them as conscious and give them rights and protection
under our laws. We will clean up the planet and the oceans to make
them safe for the Cetacea. And then the Cetacea can return, with their
populations growing to former levels as we treat them properly.
I think we will find new inspiration and insight into who we are,
how we evolved, and learn more of the history of our planet. It will
be the continuation of a grand adventure and now we will have other
species like ourselves to share it with.
I think it will transform our thinking and our societies when we
take into consideration the needs and wants of other species. I hope
that we will develop a love and concern for the entire planet and
all the species on it. I think this could lead to what I like to call
the re-enchantment of the Earth.
If someone wants to have a dolphin attended birth, what should
they do?
At the moment, the DAWN Birth Center is a "work in progress".
It will take significant support to make it a full reality. Any assistance
anyone might like to offer toward this goal is appreciated. There
are so many factors involved in a dolphin attended birth that we would
like to talk to those interested one-on-one.
So please contact us, we can likely assist in their quest. Again,
our website is www.planetpuna.com; our address is:
Sirius Institute
PO Box 1645
Pahoa, Hawaii 97668
and our phone is 808-965-9667
Please summarize for us what you have told us, what would you tell
us in a short "sound bite" that we should all remember?
Cetacea are the most intelligent creatures on Earth and have been
for millions of years. They been our friends and helped us in many
ways for millennia. They are offering their friendship and cooperation.
Many ancient cultures knew this and now Western culture is waking
up to this.
We have a wonderful opportunity to partner with our compatriots in
the sea, communicate and play with them, birth and raise babies together,
and in the process we will learn a great deal. We can then resume
our status with them as co-species, where there is mutual respect
and companionship.
In the process, we humans will learn and evolve, our babies will
be more sound, and our oceans will be protected and restored, as will
the populations of the whales and dolphins. We will end whaling of
all sorts, and honor them instead as the companions and teachers they
have always been.
Instead of feeling isolated on the planet, we have a wonderful group
of beings to share it with, who are offering their friendship and
love.
Paradise calls this "Beginning the great oneness".
Thank you!
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© 2 0 0 0 by *PlanetPuna*, Sirius Institute &
Sirius Connection 420
*All Rights Reserved to the Sources*
Updated October 9, 2004