theatlantic.com
Widespread social-distancing measures have produced some jarring effects across land, air, and sea.
From inside her living room in London, Paula Koelemeijer can feel the world around her growing quieter.
Koelemeijer,
a seismologist, has a miniature seismometer sitting on a concrete slab
at the base of her first-floor fireplace. The apparatus, though smaller
than a box of tissues, can sense all kinds of movement, from the rattle
of trains on the tracks near Koelemeijer’s home to the waves of
earthquakes rolling in from afar. Since the United Kingdom announced
stricter social-distancing rules last month, telling residents not to
leave their home except for essential reasons, the seismometer has
registered a sharp decrease in the vibrations produced by human
activity.
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