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  • Monte Carlo simulations  (1)
  • diatoms  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: quaternary ; paleolimnology ; diatoms ; pollen ; magnetic properties ; lacustrine sediments ; Mexico
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Paleoenvironmental studies have documented the late Pleistocene to Holocene evolution of the lakes in the central and southern parts of the basin of Mexico (Texcoco and Chalco). No information was available, however, for the lakes in the north-eastern part of this basin. The north-eastern and the central and southern areas represent, at present, different environmental conditions: an important gradient exists between the dry north and the moister south. To investigate the late Pleistocene to Holocene characteristics of the north-eastern lakes in the basin of Mexico two parallel cores (TA and TB) were drilled at the SE shore of Lake Tecocomulco. Stratigraphy, magnetic properties, granulometry, diatom and pollen analyses performed on these sediments indicate that the lake experienced a series of changes between ca. 〉 42,000 yr BP and present. Chronological control is given by five radiocarbon determinations. The base of the record is represented by a thick, rhyolitic air-fall tephra that could be older than ca. 50,000 yr BP. After this Plininan event, and until ca. 42,000 yr BP, Lake Tecocomulco was a moderately deep, freshwater lake surrounded by extended pine forests that suggest the presence of cooler and moister conditions than present. Between ca. 42,000 and 37,000 yr BP, the lake became shallower but with important fluctuations and pollen suggests slightly warmer conditions. Between ca. 37,000 and 30,000 yr BP the lake experienced two relatively deep phases separated by a dry interval. A second Plinian eruption, represented in the sequence by a dacitic an air-fall tephra layer dated at 31,000 yr BP, occurred in the area by the end of this dry episode. Between ca. 30,000 and 25,7000 yr BP Tecocomulco was a fresh to slightly alkaline lake with a trend towards lower level. After ca. 25,700 yr BP very low lake levels are inferred, and after ca. 16,000 yr BP the data indicate the presence of a very dry environment that was persistent until the middle Holocene. After 3,500 yr BP lacustrine conditions were re-established and the vegetation cover shows a change towards higher percentages of herbaceous taxa.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-11-09
    Description: Forecasts of future geophysical mass flows, fundamental in hazard assessment, usually rely on the reconstruction of past flows that occurred in the region of interest using models of physics that have been successful in hindcasting. The available pieces of data, are commonly related to the properties of the deposit left by the flows and to historical documentation. Nevertheless, this information can be fragmentary and affected by relevant sources of uncertainty (e.g., erosion and remobilization, superposition of subsequent events, unknown duration, and source). Moreover, different past flows may have had significantly different physical properties, and even a single flow may change its physics with respect to time and location, making the application of a single model inappropriate. In a probabilistic framework, for each model M we define (M, P_M), where P_M is a probability measure over the parameter space of M. While the support of PM can be restricted to a single value by solving an inverse problem for the optimal reconstruction of a particular flow, the inverse problem is not always well posed. That is, no input values are able to produce outputs consistent with all observed information. Choices based on limited data using classical calibration techniques (i.e. optimized data inversion) are often misleading since they do not reflect all potential event characteristics and can be error prone due to incorrectly limited event space. Sometimes the strict replication of a past flow may lead to overconstraining the model, especially if we are interested in the general predictive capabilities of a model over a whole range of possible future events. In this study, we use a multi-model ensemble and a plausible region approach to provide a more predictionoriented probabilistic framework for input space characterization in hazard analysis. In other words, we generalize a poorly constrained inverse problem, decomposing it into a hierarchy of simpler problems. We apply our procedure to the case study of the Atenquique volcaniclastic debris flow, which occurred on the flanks of Nevado de Colima volcano (Mexico) in 1955. We adopt and compare three depth-averaged models. Input spaces are explored by Monte Carlo simulation based on Latin hypercube sampling. The three models are incorporated in our large-scale mass flow simulation framework TITAN2D. Our meta-modeling framework is fully described in Fig.1 with a Venn diagram of input and output sets, and in Fig. 2 with a flowchart of the algorithm. See also for more details on the study. Our approach is characterized by three steps: (STEP 1) Let us assume that each model Mj is represented by an operator: f_Mj in R^d, where d is a dimensional parameter which is independent of the model chosen and characterizes a common output space. This operator simply links the input values to the related output values in Rd. Thus we define the global set of feasible inputs. This puts all the models in a natural meta-modeling framework, only requiring essential properties of feasibility in the models, namely the existence of the numerical output and the realism of the underlying physics. (STEP 2) After a preliminary screening, we characterize the codomain of plausible outputs: that is, the target of our simulations – it includes all the outputs consistent with the observed data, plus additional outputs which differ in arbitrary but plausible ways. For instance, having a robust numerical simulation without spurious effects, and with meaningful flow dynamics, and/or the capability to inundate a designated region. Thus, the specialized input space is defined as the inverse image of palusible outputs. (STEP 3) Furthermore, through more detailed testing, we can thus define the subspace of the inputs that are consistent with a piece of empirical data Di. For this reason those sets are called partial solutions to the inverse problem. In our case study, model selection appears to be inherently linked to the inversion problem. That is, the partial inverse problems enable us to find models depending on the example characteristics and spatial location.
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: Pisa
    Description: 5V. Processi eruttivi e post-eruttivi
    Keywords: Monte Carlo simulations ; debris flow modeling
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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