| Literature DB >> 22943005 |
Zhisheng An1, Steven M Colman, Weijian Zhou, Xiaoqiang Li, Eric T Brown, A J Timothy Jull, Yanjun Cai, Yongsong Huang, Xuefeng Lu, Hong Chang, Yougui Song, Youbin Sun, Hai Xu, Weiguo Liu, Zhangdong Jin, Xiaodong Liu, Peng Cheng, Yu Liu, Li Ai, Xiangzhong Li, Xiuju Liu, Libin Yan, Zhengguo Shi, Xulong Wang, Feng Wu, Xiaoke Qiang, Jibao Dong, Fengyan Lu, Xinwen Xu.
Abstract
Two atmospheric circulation systems, the mid-latitude Westerlies and the Asian summer monsoon (ASM), play key roles in northern-hemisphere climatic changes. However, the variability of the Westerlies in Asia and their relationship to the ASM remain unclear. Here, we present the longest and highest-resolution drill core from Lake Qinghai on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau (TP), which uniquely records the variability of both the Westerlies and the ASM since 32 ka, reflecting the interplay of these two systems. These records document the anti-phase relationship of the Westerlies and the ASM for both glacial-interglacial and glacial millennial timescales. During the last glaciation, the influence of the Westerlies dominated; prominent dust-rich intervals, correlated with Heinrich events, reflect intensified Westerlies linked to northern high-latitude climate. During the Holocene, the dominant ASM circulation, punctuated by weak events, indicates linkages of the ASM to orbital forcing, North Atlantic abrupt events, and perhaps solar activity changes.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22943005 PMCID: PMC3431539 DOI: 10.1038/srep00619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Averaged atmospheric flow fields at 700 hPa isobaric: (a) in summer (JJA) and (b) in winter (DJF) from 1971 to 200054.
Red solid circle, Lake Qinghai (36°32′–37°15′N, 99°36′–100°47′E, elevation 3194 m); triangles indicate the caves mentioned in the text, Xiannv cave (34°27′N, 101°26′E, elevation 3730 m, ~250 km southeast of Lake Qinghai); Dongge cave (25°17′N, 108°5′E); Hulu cave (32°30′N, 119°10′E). The purple shaded area indicates the region where the elevations exceed 3000 meters (i.e. the Tibetan Plateau).
Figure 2Comparison of Lake Qinghai records with other records during the last 32 ka.
(a) NGRIP δ18O26; (b) Lake Qinghai Westerlies climate index (WI, flux of >25 μm fraction); (c) CaCO3 content; (d) total organic carbon (TOC) flux; (e) Lake Qinghai Asian summer monsoon index (SMI); (f) Dongge and Hulu cave speleothem δ18O records2122. The triangles indicate the 14C dates used for the age model for core 1Fs (Supplementary Fig. S5). The transparent gray curve is July 65°N insolation55. The shaded blue bars indicate the cold-dry periods including YD, H1, H2, and H3 events. Numbers indicate glacial interstadials and correlated events at Hulu cave and Lake Qinghai.
Figure 3Comparison of Lake Qinghai records with other records since 11.5 ka.
(a) NGRIP δ18O26; (b) North Atlantic ice-rafted hematite stained grains (HSG)29; (c) Lake Qinghai Westerlies climate index (WI, flux of >25 μm fraction); (d) Lake Qinghai Asian summer monsoon index (SMI); (e) δ18O record of ostracods from Lake Qinghai: dark brown, Limnocythere inopinata; orange, Eucypris mareotica; (f) Dongge cave speleothem δ18O21; (g) atmosphere Δ14C38. The shaded blue bars indicate correlations of various proxies for climatic events. The triangles indicate the 14C dates used for the age model for core 1Fs (Supplementary Fig. S5).