Title From eons to epochs: multifractal geological time and the compound multifractal - Poisson process
Authors Lovejoy, Shaun ; Spiridonov, Andrej ; Davies, Rhisiart ; Hebert, Raphael ; Lambert, Fabrice
DOI 10.1016/j.epsl.2025.119460
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Is Part of Earth and planetary science letters.. Amsterdam : Elsevier BV. 2025, vol. 669, art. no. 119460, p. [1-18].. ISSN 0012-821X. eISSN 1385-013X
Keywords [eng] geological time scale ; geochronology ; biostratigraphy ; scaling ; fractals ; multifractals
Abstract [eng] Geological time is punctuated by events that define biostrata and the Geological Time Scale’s (GTS) hierarchy of eons, eras, periods, epochs, ages. Paleotemperatures and macroevolution rates, have already indicated that the range ≈ 1 Myr to (at least) several hundred Myrs is a scaling (hence hierarchical) “megaclimate” regime. We apply analysis techniques including Haar fluctuations, structure functions, trace moment and extended self-similarity to the temporal density of the boundary events (ρ(t)) of two global and four zonal series. We show that ρ(t) itself is a new paleoindicator and we determine the fundamental multifractal exponents characterizing the mean fluctuations, the intermittency and the degree of multifractality. The strong intermittency allows us to show that the (largest) megaclimate scale is at least ≈ 0.5 Gyr. We find that the tail of the probability distribution of the intervals (“gaps”) between boundaries is also scaling with an exponent qD ≈ 3.3 indicating huge variability with occasional very large gaps such that it’s third order statistical moment barely converges. The scaling in time implies that record incompleteness increases with its resolution (the “Resolution Sadler effect”), while scaling in probability space implies that incompleteness increases with sample length (the “Length Sadler effect”). The density description of event boundaries is only a useful characterization over time intervals long enough for there to be typically one or more events. In order to model the full range of scales and densities, we introduce a compound multifractal - Poisson process in which the subordinating multifractal process determines the probability of a Poisson event and that this new process is close to the observed statistics. Scaling changes our understanding of life and the planet and it is needed for unbiasing many statistical paleobiological and geological analyses, including unbiasing spectral analysis of the bulk of geodata that are derived from paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental archives.
Published Amsterdam : Elsevier BV
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2025
CC license CC license description