Primal rhythms of safety
Before language and civilization, our nervous systems learned to map safety through acoustic baselines. We document the ancient, uncompressed frequencies that restore neurological calm.
The Maternal Heartbeat
A pristine, 24-bit uncompressed field recording of the fundamental human baseline. The original sensory sanctuary of development, captured in an acoustic chamber.
Evolutionary safety signals
These unedited, long-form acoustic portraits are captured in remote sanctuaries. They carry the non-threatening frequencies that mammalian brains recognize as absolute sanctuary.
Nocturnal Canopy
Sub-Ice Resonance
Canopy Breath
A low-frequency acoustic portrait of a temperate rainforest at midnight. The steady, dense murmur of non-threatening fauna.
Eerie, harmonic biological calls recorded beneath the Antarctic shelf. Pure, rhythmic frequencies that quiet the modern mind.
The rhythmic rise and fall of wind passing through a dense, moss-dampened spruce valley in the Pacific Northwest.


Nervous system regulation
Modern environments bombard the human brain with erratic, synthetic frequencies. Our archival recordings provide a continuous, predictable acoustic baseline that triggers the vagus nerve, initiating deep physiological recovery.
Preserve the earth's baseline
Help us document endangered acoustic sanctuaries before they are lost to modern development. Your support funds remote field expeditions and open-access scientific research.
