Diamond Enthusiast

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This is just an Internet-based urban legend. You probably read this on one of those lists of useless facts. As the web site below states, "It is indeed fortunate that the lists are usually composed of items of no real significance, because many of the entries are of dubious veracity. The purpose of these lists apparently is not to educate the masses (however trivially), but to induce readers into the information age equivalent of a scavenger hunt, sending them scurrying all over the Internet in an attempt to verify the truthfulness of the entries." http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/duckecho.htm
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Site Administrator

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| Posts: 16750 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Platinum Enthusiast
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MkStnfnz beat me to the punch with a link to Snopes, where I first learned of this myth. They say that, "...an acoustic research experiment was carried out at the University of Salford in Greater Manchester in 2003 to set this legend to rest." This probably preceded the Mythbusters experiment.
I can't imagine any particular sound that would not -- given acoustically reflective surfaces in the vicinity -- produce an echo.
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