The Queen Mary famous for its haunts, none more famous than Jacqueline
“Jackie” Torin, who had believed to of drown in the second-class pool area. The
pool long since removed was converted into the Royal Theater.
There are numerous audio and video recording of the claimed responses of Jackie
in the first-class pool area and boiler rooms. She was recorded calling out for
her mommy, and singing London Bridges Falling Down in the April 1991 series Sightings
with host and famed psychic-medium, Peter James.
RMS Queen Mary |
Technology that was out of reach for most of us ten years
ago such as Spectrum Analysis software is easily available today from FREE software like
Audacity, to the more costly Adobe Audition, and others. It is easy enough to sample any digital sound source
audio from digital voice recorders, or the audio track from video footage.
Spectrograms can be used to identify spoken words phonetically,
which is the science of articulatory phonetics. The studying articulation,
phoneticians explain how humans produce speech sounds via the interaction of
different physiological structures. The spectrogram of the audio sample from the show reveals phonemes,
which is the basic unit of a languages’ phonology a uniquely human trait.
There are three initiators used in spoken human
languages:
The diaphragm together with the ribs and lungs (pulmonic
mechanisms),
The glottis (glottalic mechanisms), and
The tongue (lingual or "velaric" mechanisms).
These are the characteristics that a little ghost girl should
not have. Therefor "Jackie" or should I say the voice that played Jackie is very much alive.
Time displayed here in minutes| seconds| and thousandths of a second on the hms bar at the top of the spectrogram.
Time displayed here in minutes| seconds| and thousandths of a second on the hms bar at the top of the spectrogram.
Voice One 0.4 hms
Voice Two 0.28 hms
Voice Three 3.16 hms
These three examples of the alleged voice of "Jackie" within the first three minutes of this episode, clearly show human speech at a distance.
A good example is this echo of a living person saying "NOW" |
Human Speech Explained. |
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