Residents of Newberry County, South Carolina, have been startled by an unusual sound echoing through their communities. What initially sounded like distant sirens or a mysterious roar turned out to be the chorus of male cicadas emerging from a more than decade-long slumber.
The Newberry County Sheriff’s Office took to social media to ease concerns, explaining that the whining symphony was merely the male cicadas’ amorous serenade as they sought mates after their prolonged dormancy. Sheriff Lee Foster recounted how some residents, puzzled by the unfamiliar noise, even sought clarification from deputies on patrol.
Spread across the county, these noisy insects, moving in trillions, prompted a flurry of inquiries as their love songs reverberated through the region. Situated about 40 miles northwest of Columbia, Newberry County found itself at the epicenter of this natural spectacle. These cicadas, part of the trillions emerging from underground in the eastern US, adhere to either a 13- or 17-year cycle. Their synchronized emergence creates a deafening chorus, comparable in volume to jet engines. Researchers, accustomed to their thunderous symphony, often don earmuffs to protect their hearing.
Sheriff Foster, having experienced firsthand the overwhelming buzz, reassured residents that while the noise might be bothersome, these cicadas pose no threat to humans or pets. In a statement to county residents, he remarked, “Unfortunately, it is the sounds of nature.”

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