Data from: Proximal observations of epicentral infrasound generated by shallow low‐magnitude earthquakes in the Permian Basin, West Texas
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Sep 30, 2024 version files 1.27 GB
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2023_04_01.zip
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README.md
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Abstract
Infrasound generated by earthquakes and explosions is generally detected at receivers at epicentral distances of hundreds to thousands of kilometers. However, proximal (<50 km) observations are especially important for low‐magnitude earthquakes and low‐yield explosions that may not generate signals capable of being detected at great ranges. Here, we present on the signals detected on an infrasound array 3 km away from two ML 2.9 earthquakes in the Permian Basin of west Texas. Local infrasound (LIS), generated at receivers during the passage of seismic waves, was detected following each earthquake. Epicentral infrasound (EIS), created at or near the epicenter and propagating away as a sound wave, was also detected. Array processing methods show that the EIS signals arrive from the same direction as the earthquake epicenters and at acoustic speeds. To our knowledge, these are the first observations of laterally propagating EIS at proximal ranges following an earthquake of any magnitude.