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On September 1996, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), prohibiting nuclear
explosions worldwide, in all environments. The treaty calls for a
global verification system, including a network of 321 monitoring
stations distributed around the globe, a data communications
network, an international data center (IDC), and on-site
inspections to verify compliance. Successful monitoring of a CTBT
requires that we detect and identify all nuclear explosions. Since
many events of concern will be too small to be detected
teleseismically, this capability requires the use of
regional-distance seismograms. The complexity of regional
seismograms presents many technical challenges for a monitoring
program. This issue focuses on problems associated with regional
wave propagation through complex media. It includes papers that
investigate regional variations of elastic and anelastic properties
of Eurasia, the blockage of regional phases by sedimentary basins,
methods for modeling regional wave propagation and for calibrating
seismic wave paths in order to extract amplitude variations and
source parameters. These papers illustrate the research and
development necessary for acquiring an understanding of regional
wave propagation which in turn provides the foundation for
operational tools used to monitor a CTBT.
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