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Register My AudioMoth Location


Person wearing a backpack and holding a mobile phone that links to a map location.

On this page Field Researcher Citizen Scientists will Register their AudioMoth’s outdoor Location. You must register your AudioMoth’s location TWO times:

  1. Register location 2 days before the eclipse when you set up your AudioMoth
  2. On the Day of the Eclipse after you experience the maximum phase and while you complete your Eclipse Field Notes

Registering your AudioMoth’s location provides us with the latitude and longitude of where you place the AudioMoth and helps us link the data to that location after we receive your Micro-SD card.

*If you cannot register your AudioMoth’s location because you do not have cell service where you place your AudioMoth, register the location as close as possible once you have service*



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Field Researcher FAQ


Below are the answers to frequently asked questions (FAQ) about being an Eclipse Soundscapes: Field Researcher

Help monitor the effects of solar eclipses on wildlife in Central and South America with Sounds in the Darkness

Map of the North, Central, and South America with the path of the April 8, 2023 total solar eclipse overlayed.

Deep Listening Brings Rewards by The National Park Service

Snowy, wintry view of microphones installed in a binaural configuration to record natural sounds in Yellowstone National Park. Photo courtesy Jacob Job

How to View a Solar Eclipse Safely – American Astronomical Society (AAS)

Child using a special projector to view the eclipse by looking at the ground through a projector to utilize the shadow on the ground to view the eclipse safely.

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Official NASA grantee logo Eclipse Soundscapes is an enterprise of ARISA Lab, LLC and is supported by NASA award No. 80NSSC21M0008. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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