The influence and chronological uncertainties of the 8.2 ka cooling event on continental climate records in China

A compilation of early-Holocene terrestrial records from lacustrine sediments, ice cores, peat bog, palaeosols, stalagmites and flood sediments from China indicates that the early-Holocene climate was unstable and characterized by at least one centennial-scale ( 500 - 200 years) cooling event betwee...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Holocene
Main Authors: Jin, Zhangdong, Yu, Jimin, Chen, Hangxin, Wu, Yanhong, Wang, Sumin, Chen, Shiyue
Other Authors: Jin, ZD (reprint author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Earth Environm, State Key Lab Loess & Quaternary Geol, Xian 710075, Peoples R China., Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Earth Environm, State Key Lab Loess & Quaternary Geol, Xian 710075, Peoples R China., Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Inst Geog & Limnol, Key Lab Lake Sedimentat & Environm, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China., Univ Cambridge, Dept Earth Sci, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, England., Peking Univ, Coll Chem & Mol Engn, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China., Chinese Acad Geol Sci, Inst Geophys & Geochem Explorat, Langfang 065000, Peoples R China., Liaocheng Univ, Sch Environm & Planning, Shandong 252059, Peoples R China.
Format: Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: holocene 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/398946
https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683607082439
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Summary:A compilation of early-Holocene terrestrial records from lacustrine sediments, ice cores, peat bog, palaeosols, stalagmites and flood sediments from China indicates that the early-Holocene climate was unstable and characterized by at least one centennial-scale ( 500 - 200 years) cooling event between 9.0 and 7.6 ka BP. The cold period recorded in different settings has been previously linked to the 8.2 ka event suggested by delta O-18(ice) from Greenland ice cores, but the differences in time duration and regional climate conditions have been attributed to monsoon systems, inadequate age control and sampling resolution, and complex topography in China. However, our compilation indicates that it is premature to attribute the cold periods recorded at different locations in China simply to the 8.2 ka event, let alone to attribute the cause of those anomalies to a freshening of the North Atlantic Ocean circulation. Whether there was one synchronous event or not in China, where the climate is mainly affected by the monsoons and the westerlies, is open to discussion, because most of the records lack sufficient dating control to define clearly the nature of the cooling event. If a cooling event did occur, more evidence is required in multiple dimensions to characterize the time duration, magnitude and cause of the event, so much work remains to be done. Geography, Physical Geosciences, Multidisciplinary SCI(E) 0 ARTICLE 7 1041-1050 17