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Award ID contains: 1804429

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  1. Branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) have shown great promise in lacustrine temperature reconstructions across different continents. While brGDGTs have been reported from many different regions and global brGDGT-temperature calibrations have been developed with various methods, southern North America remains an understudied area with little available data. In this study, we analyzed 101 lake surface sediment samples across Mexico and Central America and compared their distributions with those in other lacustrine systems. Nine major brGDGTs were found in all samples. We investigated the relationships between the distribution of the fractional abundances of the nine major brGDGTs and temperature and developed regional calibrations for Mean Annual Temperature using three different approaches, including a novel machine learning method – Ridge Regression. All the regional calibrations provide similar results with very close error ranges (RMSE = 3.1 ◦C). The majority of global brGDGT-temperature calibrations tend to reconstruct lower temperatures when it is below 15 ◦C. Interestingly, regional brGDGT calibrations appear to reduce the “cold bias”, but the various global and regional calibrations tested here are not significantly different in their predictive capability. 
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  2. The primary scientific objective of MexiDrill, the Basin of Mexico Drilling Program, is development of a continuous, high-resolution  400 kyr lacustrine record of tropical North American environmental change. The field location, in the densely populated, water-stressed Mexico City region gives this record particular societal relevance. A detailed paleoclimate reconstruction from central Mexico will enhance our understanding of long-term natural climate variability in the North American tropics and its relationship with changes at higher latitudes. The site lies at the northern margin of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), where modern precipitation amounts are influenced by sea surface temperatures in the Pacific and Atlantic basins. During the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), more winter precipitation at the site is hypothesized to have been a consequence of a southward displacement of the mid-latitude westerlies. It thus represents a key spatial node for understanding large-scale hydrological variability of tropical and subtropical North America and is at an altitude (2240ma.s.l.), typical of much of western North America. In addition, its sediments contain a rich record of pre-Holocene volcanic history; knowledge of the magnitude and frequency relationships of the area’s explosive volcanic eruptions will improve capacity for risk assessment of future activity. Explosive eruption deposits will also be used to provide the backbone of a robust chronology necessary for full exploitation of the paleoclimate record. Here we report initial results from, and outreach activities of, the 2016 coring campaign. 
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