Not for humans with out special adaptive devices.
Sonar can harm marine life by causing disorientation, injury, or even death, particularly in marine mammals like whales and dolphins.
Narwhals do indeed use echolocation, like dolphins, and their sensitive horns to maneuver in the ocean
Dolphins eat fish and they dig the fish up out of the sand or chase them because the have sonar like bats. : )
Dolphins can emit a very wide variety of sounds, with the frequency levels ranging ten times beyond what humans can hear. This system is called "echolocation", or "sonar", just like what a submarine uses to navigate underwater. Dolphins' sonar is much more advanced than human technology and can pinpoint exact information about it's surroundings ranging from size, distance and even the nature of the object. Dolphin speech is so complex that the sounds even cross the species barriers and enable different kinds of dolphins to communicate. They have been known to instruct each other as well as receive instructions and act accordingly. If you have ever been near dolphins, you can hear them making clicking and squealing noises when they are above water. This may be their attempt at communicating with humans too.
Some animals like bats and dolphins use sonar to see by emitting sound waves that bounce off objects and return to them, allowing them to "see" their surroundings. Submarines and ships also use sonar technology for navigation and detecting underwater objects.
Some negative effects of sonar are that marine animals like whales and dolphins are being effected and not being able to use their sonar very well. It is proven that the reason whales "beach" is because the tests of low-frequency sonar's mess up the hearing of whales and make them lose their sense of direction.
Whales navigate with subsonic vibrations. like sonar
Echo location, also called SONAR. This is just like the pinging you hear in a submarine movie
they use SONAR. :)
yes u like the sounds u hear like ekk ekkk
Orcas speak by producing noises and clicks known as sonars at a certain frequency which is like how humans speak. Orcas hear by receiving sonar and other sounds through the lower jaw bone to be transmitted to the inner ear. This is possible as the lower jaw bone is hollow.
Sonar can be very loud underwater, reaching levels up to 235 decibels. This can disrupt marine life by causing hearing damage, changes in behavior, and even physical harm to animals like whales and dolphins.