Socorro Lozano
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Featured researches published by Socorro Lozano.
Journal of Paleolimnology | 1999
Margarita Caballero; Socorro Lozano; Beatriz Ortega; Jaime Urrutia; José Luis Macías
Paleoenvironmental studies have documented the late Pleistocene to Holocene evolution of the lakes in the central and southern parts of the basin of Mexico (Texcoco and Chalco). No information was available, however, for the lakes in the north-eastern part of this basin. The north-eastern and the central and southern areas represent, at present, different environmental conditions: an important gradient exists between the dry north and the moister south. To investigate the late Pleistocene to Holocene characteristics of the north-eastern lakes in the basin of Mexico two parallel cores (TA and TB) were drilled at the SE shore of Lake Tecocomulco. Stratigraphy, magnetic properties, granulometry, diatom and pollen analyses performed on these sediments indicate that the lake experienced a series of changes between ca. > 42,000 yr BP and present. Chronological control is given by five radiocarbon determinations. The base of the record is represented by a thick, rhyolitic air-fall tephra that could be older than ca. 50,000 yr BP. After this Plininan event, and until ca. 42,000 yr BP, Lake Tecocomulco was a moderately deep, freshwater lake surrounded by extended pine forests that suggest the presence of cooler and moister conditions than present. Between ca. 42,000 and 37,000 yr BP, the lake became shallower but with important fluctuations and pollen suggests slightly warmer conditions. Between ca. 37,000 and 30,000 yr BP the lake experienced two relatively deep phases separated by a dry interval. A second Plinian eruption, represented in the sequence by a dacitic an air-fall tephra layer dated at 31,000 yr BP, occurred in the area by the end of this dry episode. Between ca. 30,000 and 25,7000 yr BP Tecocomulco was a fresh to slightly alkaline lake with a trend towards lower level. After ca. 25,700 yr BP very low lake levels are inferred, and after ca. 16,000 yr BP the data indicate the presence of a very dry environment that was persistent until the middle Holocene. After 3,500 yr BP lacustrine conditions were re-established and the vegetation cover shows a change towards higher percentages of herbaceous taxa.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2002
Beatriz Ortega; Cecilia Caballero; Socorro Lozano; Isabel Israde; Gloria Vilaclara
Abstract Mineral magnetic and total organic carbon (TOC) measurements were performed on a 10.9 m long core from Zacapu basin, central Mexico. The sequence, dated by AMS 14 C, spans the last ca. 52 kyr. Curie temperature measurements, low-temperature susceptibility and low-temperature remanence indicate that the magnetic fraction is characterized by oxidized titanomagnetites with variable Ti content. Low S 300 ratios reflect the existence of high-coercivity iron oxide phases. These characteristics are considered to reflect the presence of goethite rather than hematite, formed in relatively wet, organic conditions, where soil-forming processes were intense. Comparison between magnetic and TOC results suggests that the sediments record relatively humid conditions before 35 kyr BP, and a later trend towards drier conditions. A probable hiatus is recorded before 25 kyr, and relatively dry conditions after this time that persisted throughout the Late Glacial Maximum and Mid Holocene, at 4.8 kyr. These results contrast with previous observations of deep lake phases in the neighboring Lake Patzcuaro, considered to be result of increased precipitation between 34 and 21 kyr BP.
International Geology Review | 2014
María Teresa Ramírez-Herrera; Néstor Corona; Marcelo Lagos; Jan Černý; Avto Goguitchaichvili; James Goff; Catherine Chagué-Goff; Maria Luisa Machain; Atun Zawadzki; Geraldine Jacobsen; Arturo Carranza-Edwards; Socorro Lozano; Lindsey Blecher
Tsunami deposits have been widely studied in temperate latitudes, but the intrinsic difficulties associated with tropical coastal environments, and the intensity of bioturbation in these habitats, limit the possibilities of analysing these formations. Here, we investigate the deposits on the Colima coast of Mexico, which overlies the subducting Rivera and Cocos Plates, in order to reconstruct the tsunami inundation history and related hazard. We developed a multi-proxy study aimed to recognize and date historical and palaeotsunami deposits, including historical data on the effects of a known tsunami, geomorphological mapping, stratigraphic, grain size, organic matter content, diatoms, geochemical composition, magnetic susceptibility, and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility, together with radiometric dating (210Pb and 14C). We identified two probable tsunami deposits at Palo Verde estuary including a historical event associated with the Mw 6.9 earthquake on 22 June 1932 and a palaeotsunami most likely generated by a similar event in the fourteenth century. This work shows that it is possible to identify both historical and palaeotsunamis in the tropical environment of Mexico’s Pacific coast. These data will serve to enhance our understanding of tsunami deposits in tropical environments and of the regional tsunami hazard.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2006
Beatriz Ortega; Margarita Caballero; Socorro Lozano; Gloria Vilaclara; Alejandro Rodríguez
Journal of South American Earth Sciences | 2010
Priyadarsi D. Roy; Margarita Caballero; R. Lozano; Beatriz Ortega; Socorro Lozano; Teresa Pi; Isabel Israde; O. Morton
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2013
Liseth Pérez; Jason H. Curtis; Mark Brenner; David A. Hodell; Jaime Escobar; Socorro Lozano; Antje Schwalb
Journal of Arid Environments | 2012
Priyadarsi D. Roy; Margarita Caballero; Socorro Lozano; O. Morton; Rufino Lozano; M.P. Jonathan; José Luis Sánchez; Ma. Consuelo Macías
Revista Mexicana De Ciencias Geologicas | 2012
Priyadarsi D. Roy; José Luis Arce; Rufino Lozano; M.P. Jonathan; Elena Centeno; Socorro Lozano
113th Annual GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting - 2017 | 2017
Beatriz Ortega; Ana María Soler; Alejandro Rodríguez; Socorro Lozano; Margarita Caballero
GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016 | 2016
Peter J. Fawcett; Erik T. Brown; Margarita Caballero; Socorro Lozano; Beatriz Ortega; Antje Schwalb; Victoria C. Smith; Byron Steinman; Liseth Pérez; Mona Stockhecke; Blas L. Valero-Garcés; S.F.L. Watt; Thomas Wonik