Institution
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Education•Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico•
About: National Autonomous University of Mexico is a education organization based out in Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 72868 authors who have published 127797 publications receiving 2285543 citations. The organization is also known as: UNAM & Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Catalysis, Thin film, Stars
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, a nationwide multidate GIS database was generated in order to carry out the quantification and spatial characterization of land use/cover changes (LUCC) in Mexico.
270 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the Chicxulub breccia core was used to confirm the existence of a Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary impact basin.
Abstract: THE 200-km-diameter Chicxulub structure1–3 in northern Yucatan, Mexico has emerged as the prime candidate for the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary impact crater3–6. Concentric geophysical anomalies associated with enigmatic occurrences of Upper Cretaceous breccias and andesitic rocks led Penfield and Camargo1 to suspect that this structure was a buried impact basin. More recently, the discovery of shocked quartz grains in a Chicxulub breccia3, and chemical similarities between Chicxulub rocks and K/T tektite-like glasses3–6 have been advanced as evidence that the Chicxulub structure is a K/T impact site. Here we present evidence from core samples that Chicxulub is indeed a K/T source crater, and can apparently account for all the evidence of impact distributed globally at the K/T boundary without the need for simultaneous multiple impacts or comet showers. Shocked breccia clasts found in the cores are similar to shocked lithic fragments found worldwide in the K/T boundary ejecta layer7,8. The Chicxulub melt rocks that we studied contain anomalously high levels of iridium (up to 13.5 parts per 109), also consistent with the iridium-enriched K/T boundary layer9. Our best estimate of the crystallization age of these melt rocks, as determined by 40Ar/<39Ar analyses, is 65.2 ±0.4 (1σ) Myr, in good agreement with the mean plateau age of 64.98 ± 0.05 Myr recently reported10. Furthermore, these melt rocks acquired a remanent magnetization indicating that they cooled during an episode of reversed geomagnetic polarity. The only such episode consistent with40Ar/<39Ar constraints is chron 29R, which includes the K/T boundary.
270 citations
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04 Jun 2003TL;DR: Simulation results show that the SMM and CTM produce density estimates that are both similar to one another and in good agreement with measured densities on I-210, and the mean percentage error averaged over all the test days was approximately 13%.
Abstract: A macroscopic traffic flow model, called the switching-mode model (SMM), has been derived from the cell transmission model (CTM) and then applied to the estimation of traffic densities at unmonitored locations along a highway. The SMM is a hybrid system that switches among different sets if linear difference equations, or modes, depending on the mainline boundary data and the congestion status of the cells in a highway section. Using standard linear systems techniques, the observability and controllability properties of the SMM modes have been determined. Both the SMM and a density-based version of the CTM have been simulated over a section of I-210 West in Southern California, using several days of loop detector data collected during the morning rush-hour period. The simulation results show that the SMM and CTM produce density estimates that are both similar to one another and in good agreement with measured densities on I-210. The mean percentage error averaged over all the test days was approximately 13% for both models.
270 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown with ecological niche modeling that the predicted geographical ranges of C. collaris, C. bicinctores, and C. reticulatus during glacial maxima could have provided enhanced opportunities for past hybridization, and proposed an “introgression conveyor” model to explain this unique pattern of mitochondrial variation in this region.
Abstract: We investigate the roles of mitochondrial introgression and incomplete lineage sorting during the phylogenetic history of crotaphytid lizards. Our Bayesian phylogenetic estimate for Crotaphytidae is based on analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequence data for 408 individuals representing the 12 extant species of Crotaphytus and Gambelia. The mitochondrial phylogeny disagrees in several respects with a previously published morphological tree, as well as with conventional species designations, and we conclude that some of this disagreement stems from hybridization-mediated mitochondrial introgression, as well as from incomplete lineage sorting. Unidirectional introgression of Crotaphytus collaris (western collared lizard) mitochondria into C. reticulatus (reticulate collared lizard) populations in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas has resulted in the replacement of ancestral C. reticulatus mitochondria over approximately two-thirds of the total range of the species, a linear distance of ∼270 km. Introgression of C. collaris mitochondria into C. bicinctores (Great Basin collared lizard) populations in southwestern Arizona requires a more complex scenario because at least three temporally separated and superimposed introgression events appear to have occurred in this region. We propose an “introgression conveyor” model to explain this unique pattern of mitochondrial variation in this region. We show with ecological niche modeling that the predicted geographical ranges of C. collaris, C. bicinctores, and C. reticulatus during glacial maxima could have provided enhanced opportunities for past hybridization. Our analyses suggest that incomplete lineage sorting and/or introgression has further confounded the phylogenetic placements of additional species including C. nebrius, C. vestigium, C. insularis, C. grismeri, and perhaps G. copei. Despite many independent instances of interspecific hybridization among crotaphytid lizards, the species continue to maintain morphological and geographic cohesiveness throughout their ranges.
270 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the average energy density of the motions at a given receiver, in the frequency domain, measures average energy densities and is proportional to the imaginary part of the Green's function when both source and receiver are the same.
Abstract: Microtremors are produced by multiple random sources close to the surface of the Earth. They may include the effects of multiple scattering, which suggests that their intensities could be well described by diffusion-like equations. Within this theoretical framework, the average autocorrelation of the motions at a given receiver, in the frequency domain, measures average energy density and is proportional to the imaginary part of the Green's function (GF) when both source and receiver are the same. Assuming the seismic field is diffuse we compute the H/V ratio for a surface receiver on a horizontally layered medium in terms of the imaginary part of the GF at the source. This theory links average energy densities with the GF in 3-D and considers the H/V ratio as an intrinsic property of the medium. Therefore, our approach naturally allows for the inversion of H/V, the well-known Nakamura's ratio including the contributions of Rayleigh, Love and body waves. Broad-band noise records at Texcoco, a soft soil site near Mexico City, are studied and interpreted using this theory.
270 citations
Authors
Showing all 73617 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Richard Peto | 183 | 683 | 231434 |
Anton M. Koekemoer | 168 | 1127 | 106796 |
Rory Collins | 162 | 489 | 193407 |
Timothy C. Beers | 156 | 934 | 102581 |
Vivek Sharma | 150 | 3030 | 136228 |
Kjell Fuxe | 142 | 1479 | 89846 |
Prashant V. Kamat | 140 | 725 | 79259 |
Carmen García | 139 | 1503 | 96925 |
Harold A. Mooney | 135 | 450 | 100404 |
Efe Yazgan | 128 | 986 | 79041 |
Roberto Maiolino | 127 | 816 | 61724 |
Peter Nugent | 127 | 754 | 92988 |
William R. Miller | 125 | 601 | 72570 |
Nicholas A. Kotov | 123 | 574 | 55210 |
John C. Wingfield | 122 | 509 | 52291 |