Drilling down beneath a lake in Alaska yields chemical evidence of past changes in climate. Biologic


Question: Drilling down beneath a lake in Alaska yields chemical evidence of past changes in climate. Biological silicon, left by the skeletons of single-celled creatures called diatoms, measures the abundance of life in the lake. A rather complex variable based on the ratio of certain isotopes relative to ocean water gives an indirect measure of moisture, mostly from snow. As we drill down, we look farther into the past. Here arc data from 2300 to 12.000 years ago

(a) Make a scatterplot of silicon (response) against isotope (explanatory). Ignoring the outlier, describe the direction, form, and strength of the relationship. The researchers say that this and relationships among other variables they measured are evidence for cyclic changes in climate that arc linked to changes in the sun's activity.

(b) The researchers single our one point: "The open circle in the plot Is an outlier that was excluded in the correlation analysis." Circle this outlier on your graph. What is the correlation with and without this point? The point strongly influences the correlation.

(c) Is the outlier also strongly influential fur the regression line? Calculate and draw on your graph two regression lines, and discuss what you see.

Price: $2.99
Solution: The solution file consists of 4 pages
Deliverables: Word Document

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