Bandwidth and Filtering (1)
Keep in mind that seismograms and acoustograms are not true records of ground motion.  Seismometers and microphones are machines that (usually unintentionally) filter the ground motion or pressure fluctuations so that certain frequencies are not truthfully recorded.
Active filtering of seismograms and acoustograms is often useful.  Often we look for ground motion or atmospheric waves in a specific frequency band, either because this is indicative of some important process, or because we wish to diminish “noise” that is unassociated with a signal of interest. 
The example of the next two slides shows time series and associated frequency spectra for seismic and acoustic data filtered into two different bandwidths. The frequency spectra is an important diagnostic tool for classifying or interpreting volcanic earthquakes.  For instance, we can use frequency spectra from broad-band seismic data to classify events as long-period (LP or B-type), very-long period (VLP), or volcano tectonic (VT or A-type) earthquakes.  The seismic figure for an explosion earthquake at Santiaguito (next slide) shows a VLP component in the upper trace and a short-period component in the lower trace.  This is data from the same station filtered digitally in various bandwidths.