Inversion of the travel-time curve is a fundamental problem of mathema
tical geophysics: explosions and earthquakes take place on (or close t
o) the surface of the Earth, instruments record signals from them, and
it is required to find the velocity of elastic waves in the interior
of the Earth from the times taken by the signals travelling from the s
ources to the receivers (the travel-time curve). After the pioneering
work at the beginning of the century and the detailed research in the
1960s one would hardly have expected the appearance of fundamentally n
ew results on this problem in its classical formulation, when the wave
velocity is assumed to depend only on the depth. However, it has turn
ed out to be premature to regard this formulation as settled. The theo
rems proved here on a universal sequence and extremal properties of di
screte measures will probably surprise specialists in the inverse prob
lem and will interest both experts and amateurs in extremal problems.