1982
DOI: 10.1785/bssa0720041351
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A discrimination analysis of short-period regional seismic data recorded at Tonto Forest Observatory

Abstract: A new seismic discriminant based on spectral differences of regional phases from earthquakes and explosions recorded at a single station has been tested and found to work remarkably well. The test data consisted of a well-constrained set of 30 Nevada Test Site (NTS) explosions and 21 earthquakes located within about 100 km of NTS which were recorded on short-period seismographs at the Tonto Forest Observatory in central Arizona at an epicentral distance averaging 530 km. The events in the data set cover a magn… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…On the basis of previous work, they strongly suggest that the ratio of P to Lg is not a reliable discriminant, although explosions generally do have higher values than do earthquakes. Murphy and Bennett (1982) come to the same conclusion using amplitude ratios and a data set consisting of NTS explosions and nearby earthquakes recorded at TFO. However, they only address smaller explosions, thus limiting their data set to Rainier and Yucca shots, for which strong near-source scattering can complicate the spectra of phases of interest as is discussed later in this article.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…On the basis of previous work, they strongly suggest that the ratio of P to Lg is not a reliable discriminant, although explosions generally do have higher values than do earthquakes. Murphy and Bennett (1982) come to the same conclusion using amplitude ratios and a data set consisting of NTS explosions and nearby earthquakes recorded at TFO. However, they only address smaller explosions, thus limiting their data set to Rainier and Yucca shots, for which strong near-source scattering can complicate the spectra of phases of interest as is discussed later in this article.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 54%