What? You misunderstand their use of "unique." They mean that these sounds are just as dangerous as any other sound--very loud sounds cause damage to eardrums--but that there are not any health risks unique to infrasound or other low-frequency.
Then if you click to see the detailed breakdown you see how they used guidelines from American Cancer Society and other epidemiology groups that study cancer, and that they were look at any kind of environment based disease.
And this
there is nothing here
Wtf how did you to miss this one
there is nothing here
Dude I can teach you to google https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15273020/
That's about the non-unique decibel based damage that the first article was about, and it only focused on people who work with loud ultrafrequent noise
so it doesn't apply, since windmills are not loud
also nothing in there about cancer
This says otherwise https://docs.wind-watch.org/low-frequency-noise-legislation.pdf
???? that has nothing to do with cancer or disease, that's just complaining about a decibel measuring method
if you read more than the first sentence of any of them you got me beat.
???? that has nothing to do with cancer or disease
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