Field evaluation of methane migration predictions

1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 239-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald M. McOmber ◽  
Charles A. Moore ◽  
Brian W. Beatty

Methane migration field data obtained at the Mississauga landfill in Mississauga, Ontario was used to verify computer model predictions. Because a migration control system had been in operation at the site for a year, the soil adjacent to the landfill was initially free of methane. Thus, it was possible to verify the models by first shutting down the control system. Then gas probes installed in the soils adjacent to the landfill were used to monitor the ensuing outward migration of methane. This paper compares the data obtained with computer model predictions for purely diffusional gas flow and for combined pressure–diffusional gas flow. In the region within 25 m of the landfill the computer predictions compared well with the observed field concentrations; however, beyond 25 m the observed gas concentrations exceeded predictions. The gas behavior at one probe in particular was not adequately predicted. The computer model was used to further investigate this anomoly.

1992 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 427-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas C. Mueller ◽  
Parshall B. Bush ◽  
Philip A. Banks ◽  
Ronald E. Jones

Author(s):  
Yulia V. Paukova ◽  

In the article are considered the grounds for the application of three types of removal of foreign citizens and stateless persons in case of violation of migration legislation. These are administrative expulsion, deportation and readmission. The necessity of changing the current legislation and preserving only administrative expulsion (as a measure of administrative responsibility), deportation (in the event of expulsion of persons released from places of deprivation of liberty, in respect of whom decisions on the undesirability of stay (residence) in Russia have been made) and readmission (as a method of transferring persons subject to administrative expulsion and deportation) has been substantiated. The analysis of the grounds and timing of closure of entry to foreign citizens in case of violation of migration legislation made it possible to conclude that there is no clear system. Examples of judicial practice are given, illustrating the different approach of judges when bringing foreigners to administrative responsibility. It is concluded that it is necessary to develop and implement an "Automated Information Migration Control System" which, taking into account all the circumstances, would offer the most fair decision in relation to a violator of Russian migration legislation. Subsequently, it is proposed to develop and implement a rating system for foreign citizens, which would allow bringing to administrative responsibility and setting the entry closure period of migrants, taking into account their raiting.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 13097-13128 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Hartig ◽  
C. Dislich ◽  
T. Wiegand ◽  
A. Huth

Abstract. Inverse parameter estimation of process-based models is a long-standing problem in ecology and evolution. A key problem of inverse parameter estimation is to define a metric that quantifies how well model predictions fit to the data. Such a metric can be expressed by general cost or objective functions, but statistical inversion approaches are based on a particular metric, the probability of observing the data given the model, known as the likelihood. Deriving likelihoods for dynamic models requires making assumptions about the probability for observations to deviate from mean model predictions. For technical reasons, these assumptions are usually derived without explicit consideration of the processes in the simulation. Only in recent years have new methods become available that allow generating likelihoods directly from stochastic simulations. Previous applications of these approximate Bayesian methods have concentrated on relatively simple models. Here, we report on the application of a simulation-based likelihood approximation for FORMIND, a parameter-rich individual-based model of tropical forest dynamics. We show that approximate Bayesian inference, based on a parametric likelihood approximation placed in a conventional MCMC, performs well in retrieving known parameter values from virtual field data generated by the forest model. We analyze the results of the parameter estimation, examine the sensitivity towards the choice and aggregation of model outputs and observed data (summary statistics), and show results from using this method to fit the FORMIND model to field data from an Ecuadorian tropical forest. Finally, we discuss differences of this approach to Approximate Bayesian Computing (ABC), another commonly used method to generate simulation-based likelihood approximations. Our results demonstrate that simulation-based inference, which offers considerable conceptual advantages over more traditional methods for inverse parameter estimation, can successfully be applied to process-based models of high complexity. The methodology is particularly suited to heterogeneous and complex data structures and can easily be adjusted to other model types, including most stochastic population and individual-based models. Our study therefore provides a blueprint for a fairly general approach to parameter estimation of stochastic process-based models in ecology and evolution.


Author(s):  
Jonathan Kaplan ◽  
Federico Paredes Umaña

Chapter 4 abstracts and summarizes the very copious field data from the three lengthy field seasons at Chocolá, including the specific evidence obtained about the very extensive water control system that was discovered. Intensive grid excavations were undertaken in five operations: Mound 15, the northernmost part of the elite north sector, Mounds 6 and 7, in the southern part of the north sector, Mound 2, in the central administrative sector, and Mound 5, in the south sector. Accordingly, our three field seasons provide the specific evidence and artifacts we have been able to use to understand the clearly hierarchical structure of the ancient society and city. Of particular importance for a better understanding of the material underpinnings of Chocolá is our research at Mound 5, in the south, where we believe cacao arboriculture was developed for long-distance trade in the Preclassic period.


2016 ◽  
Vol 470 (1) ◽  
pp. 279-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. P. Meshalkin ◽  
A. M. Chionov ◽  
A. S. Kazak ◽  
V. M. Aristov

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