Rapid environmental changes in the Lake Qinghai basin during the late Holocene

The Lake Qinghai Basin is sensitive to global and regional climate change because of its unique geographical location. It is the hotspot for paleoclimate research in East Asia. In this study, we reconstructed the environmental evolution of the Lake Qinghai since ∼9 ka by using a high-resolution peat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Frontiers in Earth Science
Main Authors: Wang, Chen, Qiu, Yahui, Fan, Fenglei, Li, Baosheng, Niu, Dongfeng, Shu, Peixian
Other Authors: National Natural Science Foundation of China
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Frontiers Media SA 2023
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/feart.2023.1125302
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2023.1125302/full
Description
Summary:The Lake Qinghai Basin is sensitive to global and regional climate change because of its unique geographical location. It is the hotspot for paleoclimate research in East Asia. In this study, we reconstructed the environmental evolution of the Lake Qinghai since ∼9 ka by using a high-resolution peat and fluvial-lacustrine record (Laoyinggou profile) obtained at the foot of Nanshan Mountain. Based on 8 AMS 14 C dates and lithology, loss on ignition (LOI), total organic matter (TOC), X-ray fluorescence (XRF) core-scanning measurements, ratio of total organic carbon to nitrogen (TOC/TN), and sediment particle sorting coefficients, we show that during the Middle Holocene (∼9–4.4 ka BP) this region was primarily dominated by the Asian summer monsoon, with a consistent, warm, and humid environment. By contrast, during the late Holocene (4.4 ka to present), the climatic context in this area fluctuated dramatically at the millennial scales. The low TOC content, lower TOC/TN ration and strong hydroclimatic indicate six rapid climate change events, which occurred at ∼4.0 ka, ∼3.6 ka, ∼3.2 ka, ∼2.8 ka, ∼2.1 ka, and ∼1.4 ka, all of which coincided to cold episodes in the North Atlantic Ocean.