Heterogeneous materials, such as rock, have extreme nonlinear elastic
behavior (the coefficient characterizing cubic anharmonicity is orders
of magnitude greater than that of homogeneous materials) and striking
hysteretic behavior (the stress-strain equation of state has discrete
memory). A model of these materials, taking their macroscopic elastic
properties to result from many mesoscopic hysteretic elastic units, i
s developed. The Preisach-Mayergoyz description of hysteretic systems
and effective medium theory are combined to find the quasistatic stres
s-strain equation of state; the quasistatic modulus-stress relationshi
p, and the dynamic modulus-stress relationship. Hysteresis with discre
te memory is inherent in all three relationships. The dynamic modulus-
stress relationship is characterized and used as input to the equation
of motion for nonlinear elastic wave propagation. This equation of mo
tion is examined for one-dimensional propagation using a Green functio
n method. The out-of-phase component of the dynamic modulus due to hys
teresis is found to be responsible for the generation of odd harmonics
and to determine the amplitude of the nonlinear attenuation.