A Bayesian framework for integrated eruption age and age-depth modelling
Chron.jl is a two-part framework for any combination of (1) estimating eruption/deposition age distributions from complex mineral age spectra and/or (2) subsequently building a stratigraphic age model based on those distributions. Each step relies on a Markov-Chain Monte Carlo model, and either step can be run as a standalone model if you do not need both components.
The first (distribution) MCMC model is based on the work of Keller, Schoene, and Samperton (2018) and uses information about the possible shape of the true mineral crystallization (or closure) age distribution (e.g., no crystallization possible after eruption or deposition). In this first model, the true eruption or deposition age is a parameter of this scaled crystallization distribution. The stationary distribution of this first MCMC model then gives an estimate of the eruption/deposition age.
The second (stratigraphic) MCMC model, developed for use in Schoene et al. (2019) and Deino et al. (2019) among others, uses the estimated (posterior) eruption/deposition age distributions along with the constraint of stratigraphic superposition to produce an age-depth model. This stratigraphic model can incorporate either standard Gaussian or asymmetric empirical distributions as age constraints, as well additional complications such as hiatuses of known minimum duration, height uncertainty, and one-sided age constraints. The stationary distribution of this second MCMC model yields an estimate of age at each model horizon throughout the section.
In addition to the functions defined and exported here directly, Chron.jl also reexports (and depends upon internally) StatGeochemBase.jl, NaNStatistics.jl, and Isoplot.jl.
For Chron.jl-style age-depth modelling combined with subsidence analysis, see SubsidenceChron.jl
You may cite Chron.jl as:
Keller, C.B. (2018). Chron.jl: A Bayesian framework for integrated eruption age and age-depth modelling. https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/TQX3F
Additional citations may include: For eruption age estimation
Keller, C.B., Schoene, B., & Samperton, K.M. (2018). A Stochastic Sampling Approach to Zircon Eruption Age Interpretation. Geochemical Persectives Letters 8, 31–35
For the extension of this eruption age estimation to sanidine Ar-Ar data
van Zalinge, M.E, Mark, D.F., Sparks R.S.J., Tremblay, M.M. Keller, C.B., Cooper, F.J. & Rust, A. (2022). Timescales for pluton growth, magma-chamber formation and super-eruptions. Nature 608, 87-92.
For age-depth modelling, applied to zircon U-Pb data
Schoene, B., Eddy, M.P., Samperton, K.M., Keller, C.B., Keller, G., Adatte, T., & Khadri, S.F.R. (2019). U-Pb constraints on pulsed eruption of the Deccan Traps across the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. Science 363 (6429), 862–866.
For age-depth modelling, applied to sanidine Ar-Ar data
Deino, A.L., Dommain, R., Keller, C.B., Potts, R., Behrensmeyer, A.K., Beverly, E.J., King, J., Heil, C.W., Stockhecke, M., Brown, E.T., Moerman, J., de Menocal, P., Levin, N.E., & ODP Scientific Team. (2019). Chronostratigraphic model of a high-resolution drill core record of the past million years from the Koora Basin, south Kenya Rift: Overcoming the difficulties of variable sedimentation rate and hiatuses. Quaternary Science Reviews 215, 213–231.
Chron.jl is written in the Julia programming language, and is registered on the General registry. To install, enter the Julia package manager (type ] in the REPL) and type:
pkg> add Chron
If you are trying to use Chron with a published script written prior to ~2021, you may want to use the oldest registered version of the package, which you can install with (e.g.)
pkg> add Chron@v0.1
Many example scripts and notebooks are provided in the examples folder.
For a quick test (without having to install anything), try the interactive online Jupyter notebook (note: it'll take a few minutes for the notebook to launch).
This runs examples/Chron1.0Coupled.ipynb on a JupyterHub server hosted by the Binder project. If you make changes to the interactive online notebook, you can save them with File
> Download as
> Notebook (.ipynb)
To run a downloaded notebook locally, use IJulia
julia> using IJulia
julia> notebook()
For an example of the Pb-loss-aware options, see also
If you want to use Chron.jl for for age-depth modelling without the eruption/deposition age estimation step, there are also example notebooks standalone age-depth modelling using either
- Age-depth modelling with simple Gaussian age constraints or
- Age-depth modelling with radiocarbon age constraints
with or without hiatuses.
To run an eruption/deposition age estimate, without any age-depth modelling, try the notebooks for
- Standalone eruption/deposition age modelling
- Eruption/deposition age demo
- Ar-Ar closure distribution demo
After installing Julia with or without an editor plugin, and Chron.jl (above), run examples/Chron1.0Coupled.jl to see how the code works. It should look something like this:
using Chron
using Plots
This example data is from Clyde et al. (2016) "Direct high-precision U–Pb geochronology of the end-Cretaceous extinction and calibration of Paleocene astronomical timescales" EPSL 452, 272–280. doi: 10.1016/j.epsl.2016.07.041
nSamples = 5 # The number of samples you have data for
smpl = ChronAgeData(nSamples)
smpl.Name = ("KJ08-157", "KJ04-75", "KJ09-66", "KJ04-72", "KJ04-70",)
smpl.Height[:] = [ -52.0, 44.0, 54.0, 82.0, 93.0,]
smpl.Height_sigma[:] = [ 3.0, 1.0, 3.0, 3.0, 3.0,]
smpl.Age_Sidedness[:] = zeros(nSamples) # Sidedness (zeros by default: geochron constraints are two-sided). Use -1 for a maximum age and +1 for a minimum age, 0 for two-sided
smpl.Path = "DenverUPbExampleData/" # Where are the data files?
smpl.inputSigmaLevel = 2 # i.e., are the data files 1-sigma or 2-sigma. Integer.
AgeUnit = "Ma" # Unit of measurement for ages and errors in the data files
HeightUnit = "cm"; # Unit of measurement for Height and Height_sigma
For each sample in smpl.Name
, we must have a .csv
file in smpl.Path
which contains each individual mineral age and uncertainty. For instance, examples/DenverUPbExampleData/KJ08-157.csv contains:
66.12,0.14
66.115,0.048
66.11,0.1
66.11,0.17
66.096,0.056
66.088,0.081
66.085,0.076
66.073,0.084
66.07,0.11
66.055,0.043
66.05,0.16
65.97,0.12
Note also that smpl.Height must increase with increasing stratigraphic height -- i.e., stratigraphically younger samples must be more positive. For this reason, it is convenient to represent depths below surface as negative numbers.
To learn more about the eruption/deposition age estimation model, see also Keller, Schoene, and Samperton (2018) and the BayeZirChron demo notebook. It is important to note that this model (like most if not all others) has no knowledge of open-system behaviour, so e.g., Pb-loss will lead to erroneous results.
# Number of steps to run in distribution MCMC
distSteps = 10^7
distBurnin = floor(Int,distSteps/100)
# Choose the form of the prior distribution to use.
# A variety of potentially useful distributions are provided in DistMetropolis.jl - Options include UniformDisribution,
# TriangularDistribution, BootstrappedDistribution, and MeltsVolcanicZirconDistribution - or you can define your own.
dist = TriangularDistribution;
# Run MCMC to estimate saturation and eruption/deposition age distributions
smpl = tMinDistMetropolis(smpl,distSteps,distBurnin,dist);
Estimating eruption/deposition age distributions...
1: KJ08-157
2: KJ04-75
3: KJ09-66
4: KJ04-72
5: KJ04-70
Let's see what that did
; ls $(smpl.Path)
results = readdlm(smpl.Path*"results.csv",',')
; open $(smpl.Path*"KJ04-75_rankorder.pdf")
BootstrappedDistribution.pdf
KJ04-70.csv
KJ04-70_distribution.pdf
KJ04-70_rankorder.pdf
KJ04-72.csv
KJ04-72_distribution.pdf
KJ04-72_rankorder.pdf
KJ04-75.csv
KJ04-75_distribution.pdf
KJ04-75_rankorder.pdf
KJ08-157.csv
KJ08-157_distribution.pdf
KJ08-157_rankorder.pdf
KJ09-66.csv
KJ09-66_distribution.pdf
KJ09-66_rankorder.pdf
KJ12-01.csv
results.csv
6×5 Array{Any,2}:
"Sample" "Age" "2.5% CI" "97.5% CI" "sigma"
"KJ08-157" 66.065 66.0312 66.0896 0.0151996
"KJ04-75" 65.9744 65.9237 66.0056 0.0198365
"KJ09-66" 65.9475 65.9143 65.9807 0.0168379
"KJ04-72" 65.9531 65.9194 65.9737 0.0135548
"KJ04-70" 65.8518 65.7857 65.898 0.0288371
Let's look at the plots for sample KJ04-70:
For each sample, the eruption/deposition age distribution is inherently asymmetric, because of the one-sided relationship between mineral closure and eruption/deposition. For example:
Consequently, rather than simply taking a mean and standard deviation of the stationary distribtuion of the Markov Chain, the histogram of the stationary distribution is fit to an empirical distribution function of the form
where
i.e., an asymmetric exponential function with two log-linear segments joined with an arctangent sigmoid. After fitting, the five parameters smpl.params
and passed to the stratigraphic model
For a publication-quality result, you probably want nsteps and burnin on the order of
config.nsteps = 30000 # Number of steps to run in distribution MCMC
config.burnin = 10000*npoints_approx # Number to discard
and examine the log likelihood plot to make sure you've converged.
To run the stratigraphic MCMC model, we call the StratMetropolisDist
function. If you want to skip the first step and simply input run the stratigraphic model with Gaussian mean age and standard deviation for some number of stratigraphic horizons, then you can set smpl.Age
and smpl.Age_sigma
directly, but then you'll need to call StratMetropolis
instead of StratMetropolisDist
# Configure the stratigraphic Monte Carlo model
config = StratAgeModelConfiguration()
# If you in doubt, you can probably leave these parameters as-is
config.resolution = 1.0 # Same units as sample height. Smaller is slower!
config.bounding = 0.1 # how far away do we place runaway bounds, as a fraction of total section height
(bottom, top) = extrema(smpl.Height)
npoints_approx = round(Int,length(bottom:config.resolution:top) * (1 + 2*config.bounding))
config.nsteps = 15000 # Number of steps to run in distribution MCMC
config.burnin = 10000*npoints_approx # Number to discard
config.sieve = round(Int,npoints_approx) # Record one out of every nsieve steps
# Run the stratigraphic MCMC model
(mdl, agedist, lldist) = StratMetropolisDist(smpl, config); sleep(0.5)
# Plot the log likelihood to make sure we're converged (n.b burnin isn't recorded)
plot(lldist,xlabel="Step number",ylabel="Log likelihood",label="",line=(0.85,:darkblue))=
Generating stratigraphic age-depth model...
Burn-in: 1750000 steps
Collecting sieved stationary distribution: 2625000 steps
# Plot results (mean and 95% confidence interval for both model and data)
hdl = plot([mdl.Age_025CI; reverse(mdl.Age_975CI)],[mdl.Height; reverse(mdl.Height)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.5,:blue), label="model")
plot!(hdl, mdl.Age, mdl.Height, linecolor=:blue, label="", fg_color_legend=:white)
plot!(hdl, smpl.Age, smpl.Height, xerror=(smpl.Age-smpl.Age_025CI,smpl.Age_975CI-smpl.Age),label="data",seriestype=:scatter,color=:black)
plot!(hdl, xlabel="Age ($AgeUnit)", ylabel="Height ($HeightUnit)")
savefig(hdl,"AgeDepthModel.pdf");
display(hdl)
# Interpolate results at KTB (height = 0)
height = 0
KTB = linterp1s(mdl.Height,mdl.Age,height)
KTB_min = linterp1s(mdl.Height,mdl.Age_025CI,height)
KTB_max = linterp1s(mdl.Height,mdl.Age_975CI,height)
print("Interpolated age: $KTB +$(KTB_max-KTB)/-$(KTB-KTB_min) Ma")
# We can also interpolate the full distribution:
interpolated_distribution = Array{Float64}(undef,size(agedist,2))
for i=1:size(agedist,2)
interpolated_distribution[i] = linterp1s(mdl.Height,agedist[:,i],height)
end
histogram(interpolated_distribution, xlabel="Age (Ma)", ylabel="N", label="", fill=(0.85,:darkblue), linecolor=:darkblue)
Interpolated age: 66.01580546918152 +0.04924877964148777/-0.049571492234548487 Ma
There are other things we can plot as well, such as deposition rate:
# Set bin width and spacing
binwidth = 0.01 # Myr
binoverlap = 10
ages = collect(minimum(mdl.Age):binwidth/binoverlap:maximum(mdl.Age))
bincenters = ages[1+Int(binoverlap/2):end-Int(binoverlap/2)]
spacing = binoverlap
# Calculate rates for the stratigraphy of each markov chain step
dhdt_dist = Array{Float64}(undef, length(ages)-binoverlap, config.nsteps)
@time for i=1:config.nsteps
heights = linterp1(reverse(agedist[:,i]), reverse(mdl.Height), ages)
dhdt_dist[:,i] = abs.(heights[1:end-spacing] - heights[spacing+1:end]) ./ binwidth
end
# Find mean and 1-sigma (68%) CI
dhdt = nanmean(dhdt_dist,dim=2)
dhdt_50p = nanmedian(dhdt_dist,dim=2)
dhdt_16p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,15.865,dim=2) # Minus 1-sigma (15.865th percentile)
dhdt_84p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,84.135,dim=2) # Plus 1-sigma (84.135th percentile)
# Other confidence intervals (10:10:50)
dhdt_20p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,20,dim=2)
dhdt_80p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,80,dim=2)
dhdt_25p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,25,dim=2)
dhdt_75p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,75,dim=2)
dhdt_30p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,30,dim=2)
dhdt_70p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,70,dim=2)
dhdt_35p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,35,dim=2)
dhdt_65p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,65,dim=2)
dhdt_40p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,40,dim=2)
dhdt_60p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,60,dim=2)
dhdt_45p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,45,dim=2)
dhdt_55p = nanpctile(dhdt_dist,55,dim=2)
# Plot results
hdl = plot(bincenters,dhdt, label="Mean", color=:black, linewidth=2)
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_16p; reverse(dhdt_84p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="68% CI")
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_20p; reverse(dhdt_80p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="")
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_25p; reverse(dhdt_75p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="")
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_30p; reverse(dhdt_70p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="")
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_35p; reverse(dhdt_65p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="")
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_40p; reverse(dhdt_60p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="")
plot!(hdl,[bincenters; reverse(bincenters)],[dhdt_45p; reverse(dhdt_55p)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.2,:darkblue), linealpha=0, label="")
plot!(hdl,bincenters,dhdt_50p, label="Median", color=:grey, linewidth=1)
plot!(hdl, xlabel="Age ($AgeUnit)", ylabel="Depositional Rate ($HeightUnit / $AgeUnit over $binwidth $AgeUnit)", fg_color_legend=:white)
# savefig(hdl,"DepositionRateModelCI.pdf")
display(hdl)
We can also deal with discrete hiatuses in the stratigraphic section if we know where they are and about how long they lasted. We need some different models and methods though. In particular, in addition to the StratAgeData
struct, we also need a HiatusData
struct now, and we're going to want to pass these to StratMetropolisDistHiatus
instead of StratMetropolisDist
like before.
# Data about hiatuses
nHiatuses = 2 # The number of hiatuses you have data for
hiatus = HiatusData(nHiatuses) # Struct to hold data
hiatus.Height = [20.0, 35.0 ]
hiatus.Height_sigma = [ 0.0, 0.0 ]
hiatus.Duration = [ 0.2, 0.43]
hiatus.Duration_sigma = [ 0.05, 0.07]
# Run the model. Note: we're using `StratMetropolisDistHiatus` now, instead of just `StratMetropolisDistHiatus`
(mdl, agedist, hiatusdist, lldist) = StratMetropolisDistHiatus(smpl, hiatus, config); sleep(0.5)
# Plot results (mean and 95% confidence interval for both model and data)
hdl = plot([mdl.Age_025CI; reverse(mdl.Age_975CI)],[mdl.Height; reverse(mdl.Height)], fill=(minimum(mdl.Height),0.5,:blue), label="model")
plot!(hdl, mdl.Age, mdl.Height, linecolor=:blue, label="", fg_color_legend=:white)
plot!(hdl, smpl.Age, smpl.Height, xerror=(smpl.Age-smpl.Age_025CI,smpl.Age_975CI-smpl.Age),label="data",seriestype=:scatter,color=:black)
plot!(hdl, xlabel="Age (Ma)", ylabel="Height (cm)")
Generating stratigraphic age-depth model...
Burn-in: 1750000 steps
Collecting sieved stationary distribution: 2625000 steps