I think he's actually asking why at a given speed the amplitude of the harmonics tend to reduce with increasing frequency.
Well, firstly it depends what you are measuring, if you keep on differentiating then you can change that round. However, if we limit ourselves to velocity and acceleration it is generally true.
I'd answer it by saying that the response to an impact can be calculated as the sum of the modes at that point (modal superposition), and that by its nature a low frequency mode represents a bigger proportion of the signal than HF modes. But I'm not wildly happy about that.
Another observation that I don't necessarily agree with is that damping of high frequency modes tends to be greater than for low frequency modes.
Probably the real reason this is hard to answer is that it is a general trend, rather than a truth, and so any theory can be knocked down by referring to a specific case.
Cheers
Greg Locock