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A variety of geophysical records are examined to determine the dependence upon the lag s of a quantity called ‘rescaled range,’ denoted by R ( t , s )/ S ( t , s ). If there had been no appreciable dependence between two values of the record at very distant points in time, the ratio R / S would have been proportional to s 0.5 . But, in fact, as first noted by Edwin Hurst, the R / S ratio of hydrological and other geophysical records is proportional to s H with H ≠ 0.5. Hurst's original claims must be tightened and hedged, and his estimates of H must be discarded, but his general idea will be shown to be correct. We have shown elsewhere that this behavior of R / S means that the strength of long‐range statistical dependence in geophysical records is considerable.
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Benoît B. Mandelbrot
University of Geneva
James R. Wallis
University of Wolverhampton
Water Resources Research
Yale University
IBM (United States)
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Mandelbrot et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1d72c9cc9f7df1b70574c3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/wr005i002p00321