Premium
A model‐based approach to wildland fire reconstruction using sediment charcoal records
Author(s) -
Itter Malcolm S.,
Finley Andrew O.,
Hooten Mevin B.,
Higuera Philip E.,
Marlon Jennifer R.,
Kelly Ryan,
McLachlan Jason S.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
environmetrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.68
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1099-095X
pISSN - 1180-4009
DOI - 10.1002/env.2450
Subject(s) - charcoal , multivariate statistics , fire history , environmental science , sediment , univariate , physical geography , hydrology (agriculture) , geology , geography , statistics , climate change , mathematics , oceanography , geomorphology , materials science , geotechnical engineering , metallurgy
Lake sediment charcoal records are used in paleoecological analyses to reconstruct fire history, including the identification of past wildland fires. One challenge of applying sediment charcoal records to infer fire history is the separation of charcoal associated with local fire occurrence and charcoal originating from regional fire activity. Despite a variety of methods to identify local fires from sediment charcoal records, an integrated statistical framework for fire reconstruction is lacking. We develop a Bayesian point process model to estimate the probability of fire associated with charcoal counts from individual‐lake sediments and estimate mean fire return intervals. A multivariate extension of the model combines records from multiple lakes to reduce uncertainty in local fire identification and estimate a regional mean fire return interval. The univariate and multivariate models are applied to 13 lakes in the Yukon Flats region of Alaska. Both models resulted in similar mean fire return intervals (100–350 years) with reduced uncertainty under the multivariate model due to improved estimation of regional charcoal deposition. The point process model offers an integrated statistical framework for paleofire reconstruction and extends existing methods to infer regional fire history from multiple lake records with uncertainty following directly from posterior distributions.