samec - regression analysis of relations among main quaternary environmental changes indicators
DESCRIPTION
Presentation from Third InDOG Doctoral Conference in Olomouc, Czech Republic. 13. - 16. October 2014TRANSCRIPT
Regression analysis of relations among
Quaternary environmental change indicators
Pavel Samec
Content
• Introduction
- Glacial/interglacial cycles
- The polyglacism theory
• Material
- Loess/paleosol proxy series
- Deep-sea mud proxy series
- Ice core proxy series
• Methods
- Exploratory data analysis
- Interpolation
- Multiple regression
- Logistic regression
• Results and Discussion• Summary• References
Introduction
The Quaternary is a period when the geological presence has developed.The Quaternary Period is characterized by regular alternation of major environmental changes with the intensity of glacial/interglacial. • The glacial is an event of glaciations characterized by expansion of continental and
mountain glaciers, global marine regression, global reduction of vegetation biomass and expansion of terrestrial sedimentary environments.
• The interglacial is an event of interglaciations characterized by minimal glaciations, global marine transgression, global growth of vegetation biomass and an intensive soil formation ont the most of land.
The polyglacism theory deals with common variability of marine and terrestrial sedimentation features in relation to the variability of the external physical environment that indicate the global impacts of multiple oscillations glacial/interglacial. The aim of the study was using of the logistic regression for better description of assumed polyglacial relationships.
Material
• Data
- Loess/paleosol series (Chinese Loess Plateau; 6.9-0 Ma; Sun et al. 2012)
- Deep sea d18O (East Pacific; 470-4 Ka; Lea et al. 2000)
- Ice core (East Antarctica; 803-2 Ka; Barnola et al. 1999; Petit et al. 2000)
• Analysed periods
- Middle-Upper Pleistocene (470-12 Ka)
- Upper Pleistocene – Holocene (126-1 Ka)
The Central Chinese Loess Plateau eolian sediment magnetic susceptibility (MS) (data according to Sun et al. 2012).
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
0.00.30.60.91.21.51.72.12.42.73.03.23.63.84.14.64.95.15.45.76.06.46.8
MS
(10
-8m
3 /kg
)
Dating (Ma)
The East Equatorial Pacific average sea surface temperatures and oxygen proxy record (data according to Lea et a. 2000).
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
16
20
24
28
32
43680124176245306384461
d18O T (°C)
Dating (Ka)sea surface temperature
oxygen isotopical signal
Methods
• Global temperature deviations were main features of the glacial/interglacial cycle.
• Glacial – 0• Interglacial - 1
-10
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
2
4
180
200
220
240
260
280
300
2136231314
DT (°C) CO2 (ppm)
Dating (Ka)carbon dioxide (ppm)
temperature deviations(°C)
150
175
200
225
250
275
300
-10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2
CO2 (ppm)
DT (°C)
North Atlantic
East Equatorial Pacific
Antarctica
0.00
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
0.00 0.30 0.60 0.90 1.20 1.50
dCO2
Ttropy/Tpolar
• Exploratory data analysis
- Test on normality distribution
- Regression diagnosis
- Linear correlation and regression
• Interpolation - Transformation according to 0-1 limits
• Regression analysis - Linear regression
- Multiple regression
- Logistic regression
Data calibration
EDA
Linear regression
Binomical interpolation
Multiple regression Logistic regression
Results and discussion
Exploratory linear regression of basic Quaternary sedimentation core properties. y – receptor; x – predictor; F –Fischer-Snedecorov’s testing criterion; t – Student’s t-test criterion; r ‒ correlation coefficient; SC – Scott’s test on multicolinearity; C-W – Cook-Weisberg’s test on heteroscedasticity; J-B – Jarque-Berrae’s test on normality of residues; Wa – Wald’s test on autocorrelation.
Linear regression of the compared facial proxy data
Multiple regression of compared environmetal proxy indicators
Multiple regression of basic Quaternary sea (d18O) and terrestrial environmental indicators (CaCO3). SD – standard deviation; B-CT – Box-Cox transformation; MS – magnetic susceptibility; GSM – grain size median.
Logistic regression of compared environmental proxy indicators
Summary
• Changes in the basic soil properties of a loess/paleosol sequences reliably do not indicate changes in the intensity of glacial/interglacial cycles between the Middle and Upper Pleistocene.
• Changes in the basic soil properties of a loess/paleosol sequences have been reflecting climatic changes statistically more significantly than the deep-sea sedimentation since the Upper Pleistocene (cycle eem‒visla) .
• Correlations of atmospheric CO2 and surface temperatures are greater than correlation of other polyglacial phenomenas.
• Linear regression revealed on the assumption that the dependences of soil properties were smaller than polyglacial relations of other environmental indicators.
• Logistic regression suggested that temporal variability in feedbacks between climatic change predictors and properties of forming sediments may be cause of the lack of a simple Quaternary climatic change indication.
References
• BARNOLA J.M. et al. (1999): Historical CO2 record from the Vostok ice core. In: Trends: A Compendium of Data on Global Change. U. S. Department of Energy Oak Ridge.
• HEIKKINEN R.K. et al. (2006): Methods and uncertainties in bioclimatic envelope modelling under climate change. Progress in Physical Geography 30: 6751‒6777.
• KUKLA J. (1978): The Classical European Glacial Stages: Correlation with deep-sea sediments. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Science 6: 57–93.
• KUKLA G., CÍLEK V. (1996): Plio-Pleistocene megacycles: record of climate and tectonics. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 120: 171‒194.
• LEA D.W. et al. (2000): Climate impact of late Quaternary equatorial Pacific sea surface temperature variations. Science 289: 1719–1724.
• OSBORN J. W. (2010): Improving your data transformation: Applying the Box-Cox transformation. Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation 15: 2‒9.
• PETIT J.R. (1999): Climate and atmospheric history of the past 420,000 years from the Vostok ice core, Antarctica. Nature 399: 429–436.
• SUN Y. (2012): Seven million years of wind and precipitation variability on the Chinese Loess Plateau. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 297: 525–535.