Plio-Pleistocene establishment of Irtysh River in Junggar, Northwest China: implications for Siberian-Arctic river system evolution and resulting climate impact

The influence of Siberian freshwater input to the Arctic Ocean on Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet expansions remains poorly known due to the incomplete geologic record of Siberian-Arctic river systems during the late Pliocene. The Irtysh River is a major Siberian river, rising from the Altay Mountains...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Ma, Yan, Zheng, Dewen, Zhang, Huiping, Pang, Jianzhang, Wang, Weitao, Wang, Yizhou, Wu, Ying, He, Huaiyu, Stuart, Finlay M., Xu, Sheng
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/243786/
http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/243786/2/243786.pdf
Description
Summary:The influence of Siberian freshwater input to the Arctic Ocean on Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet expansions remains poorly known due to the incomplete geologic record of Siberian-Arctic river systems during the late Pliocene. The Irtysh River is a major Siberian river, rising from the Altay Mountains, northwestern China, and flowing 4,282 km before joining the Ob River. Here, we present new field evidence and chronological data from a combination of cosmogenic 21Ne and 26Al/10Be measurements that constrain the establishment of the Irtysh River to ca. 2.77+0.39/-0.33 Ma. These first quantitative chronological results, together with previous sedimentological, geomorphological, and geochemical evidence, support a young Siberian-Arctic river system. Its coincidence with the late Pliocene ice-sheet expansions in the Northern Hemisphere implies a profound impact of Siberian freshwater input to the Arctic on the major ice advances that significantly affected global oceanographic and climatic systems.