A high-resolution climatic change since the Late Glacial Age inferred from multi-proxy of sediments in Qinghai Lake

被引:1
|
作者
Ji Shen
Xingqi Liu
Matsumoto Ryo
Sumin Wang
Xiangdong Yang
机构
[1] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology
[2] Tokyo University,Geology Institute
来源
Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences | 2005年 / 48卷
关键词
Qinghai Lake; Late-Glacial Age to Holocene; multi-proxy analysis; high-resolution; palaeoclimate;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Based on multi-proxy analysis of pollen, carbonate, TOC, TN and δ 13C of organic matters, a high-resolution climatic evolution of Qinghai Lake since the Late Glacial Age is reconstructed. The results indicate that the boundary between the Last Glacial Maximum and the Late Glacial Age is at about 18.2 cal.ka BP. The warm and wet period, which began at about 15.4 cal.ka BP, culminated at 7.4 cal.ka BP and came to its end at about 4.5 cal.ka BP. After that, the climate gradually became cold and dry. The multi-proxy analysis indicates that the climate fluctuated greatly during the transitional period from the Late glacial Age to the Holocene, and this is in good accordance with that reflected by deep sea cores of North Atlantic, ice cores of Greenland, lake sediments in Europe, loess sequences and Guliya ice core in China. The climatic evolutional characteristic of the Qinghai Lake since the Late Glacial Age shows that the driving force of the East-Asia Monsoon correlates with solar radiation on the ten-thousand-year scale.
引用
收藏
页码:742 / 751
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A high-resolution climatic change since the Late Glacial Age inferred from multi-proxy of sediments in Qinghai Lake
    Shen, J
    Liu, XQ
    Matsumoto, R
    Wang, SM
    Yang, XD
    SCIENCE IN CHINA SERIES D-EARTH SCIENCES, 2005, 48 (06): : 742 - 751
  • [3] A high-resolution climatic change since Holocene inferred from multi-proxy of lake sediment in westerly area of China
    Jiang, QingFeng
    Shen, Ji
    Liu, XingQi
    Zhang, EnLou
    Xiao, XiaYun
    CHINESE SCIENCE BULLETIN, 2007, 52 (14): : 1970 - 1979
  • [4] A high-resolution climatic change since Holocene inferred from multi-proxy of lake sediment in westerly area of China
    JIANG QingFeng1
    2 Geographical Science School
    3 Graduate University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
    Chinese Science Bulletin, 2007, (14) : 1970 - 1979
  • [5] Climatic and megaherbivory controls on late-glacial vegetation dynamics: a new, high-resolution, multi-proxy record from Silver Lake, Ohio
    Gill, Jacquelyn L.
    Williams, John W.
    Jackson, Stephen T.
    Donnelly, Jeffrey P.
    Schellinger, Grace C.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2012, 34 : 66 - 80
  • [6] A high-resolution multi-proxy lake record of Holocene environmental change in southern Iceland
    Blair, Celene L.
    Geirsdottir, Aslaug
    Miller, Gifford H.
    JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE, 2015, 30 (03) : 281 - 292
  • [7] Hydroclimatic evolution of the southwestern Tibetan Plateau since the last glacial maximum inferred from multi-proxy data in Lake Zabuye
    Ling, Yuan
    Zeng, Fangang
    Bendle, James
    Cheng, Jun
    Zhang, Long
    Wang, Yong
    Tian, Lijun
    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2025, 664
  • [8] A multi-proxy Late-glacial palaeoenvironmental record from Lake Bled, Slovenia
    Maja Andrič
    Julieta Massaferro
    Ueli Eicher
    Brigitta Ammann
    Markus Christian Leuenberger
    Andrej Martinčič
    Elena Marinova
    Anton Brancelj
    Hydrobiologia, 2009, 631
  • [9] A high-resolution multi-proxy record of late Cenozoic environment change from central Taklimakan Desert, China
    Wang, X.
    Sun, D. H.
    Wang, F.
    Li, B. F.
    Wu, S.
    Guo, F.
    Li, Z. J.
    Zhang, Y. B.
    Chen, F. H.
    CLIMATE OF THE PAST, 2013, 9 (06) : 2731 - 2739
  • [10] A multi-proxy Late-glacial palaeoenvironmental record from Lake Bled, Slovenia
    Andric, Maja
    Massaferro, Julieta
    Eicher, Ueli
    Ammann, Brigitta
    Leuenberger, Markus Christian
    Martincic, Andrej
    Marinova, Elena
    Brancelj, Anton
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2009, 631 (01) : 121 - 141