Become an expert in R — Interactive courses, Cheat Sheets, certificates and more!
Get Started for Free

venice

Sea Level Data


Description

The venice data frame has 51 rows and 2 columns.

Pirazzoli (1982) collected the ten largest values of sea levels in Venice (with a few exceptions) for the years 1887–1981. The venice data frame contains the maxima for the years 1931–1981.

Usage

data(venice)

Format

This data frame contains the following columns:

year

the years;

sea

the sea levels (in cm).

Source

The data were obtained from

Smith, R. L. (1986) Extreme value theory based on the r-largest annual events. Journal of Hydrology , 86, 27–43.

References

Pirazzoli, P. (1982) Maree estreme a Venezia (periodo 1872–1981). Acqua Aria, 10, 1023–1039.

Examples

data(venice)
attach(venice)
#
plot(sea ~ year, ylab = "sea level")
##
Year <- 1:51/51
venice.l <- rsm(sea ~ Year + I(Year^2), family = extreme)
lines(year, fitted(venice.l))
##
c11 <- cos(2*pi*1:51/11) ; s11 <- sin(2*pi*1:51/11)
c19 <- cos(2*pi*1:51/18.62) ; s19 <- sin(2*pi*1:51/18.62)
venice.p <- rsm(sea ~ Year + I(Year^2) + c11 + s11 + c19 + s19, 
                family = extreme)
lines(year, fitted(venice.p), col = "red")
##
detach()

marg

Approximate Marginal Inference for Regression-Scale Models

v1.2-2.1
GPL (>= 2) | file LICENCE
Authors
S original by Alessandra R. Brazzale <alessandra.brazzale@unipd.it>. R port by Alessandra R. Brazzale <alessandra.brazzale@unipd.it>, following earlier work by Douglas Bates.
Initial release
2014-03-31

We don't support your browser anymore

Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.