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soundmarks

Soundmarks are sounds or soundscapes that are distinctive to a place and serve as audible identifiers of that locale. They function like landmarks in the visual world, but their primary medium is sound. A soundmark may be a natural sound, such as birdsong or waves, or a human-made sound, such as church bells, a distinctive train whistle, or the ambience of a busy market. The key idea is that the sound is closely associated with a place and is recognized and valued by its residents or visitors. Removing or altering a soundmark can erode the place’s sonic character.

Originating with the work of R. Murray Schafer in the World Soundscape Project during the 1970s, the

Examples of soundmarks can be natural (such as specific birdsongs or coastal sounds) or human-made (such as

term
soundmark
is
used
to
describe
sounds
that
contribute
to
a
location’s
identity.
Schafer
distinguished
soundmarks
from
functional
signals
and
from
noise,
emphasizing
that
soundmarks
are
culturally
meaningful
and
locally
recognizable.
The
concept
has
since
been
used
in
soundscape
studies,
urban
design,
and
heritage
preservation
to
highlight
the
auditory
dimension
of
place.
church
bells,
a
distinctive
factory
whistle,
or
a
traditional
market
chorus).
In
practice,
soundmarks
are
identified
through
listening
surveys,
field
recordings,
and
sonic
mapping,
often
involving
community
input.
Preservation
efforts
focus
on
maintaining
or
restoring
these
audible
elements
to
sustain
a
locale’s
character
amid
development
and
changing
noise
environments.