1. Sensitive grain-size records of Holocene East Asian summer monsoon in sediments of northern South China Sea slope
- Author
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Huang, Jie, Li, Anchun, and Wan, Shiming
- Subjects
- *
PARTICLE size determination , *HOLOCENE paleoclimatology , *MONSOONS , *CLIMATE change , *SEDIMENTS , *CLAY minerals , *SEA level - Abstract
Abstract: Changes in paleoenvironments over the last 17,500yr have been documented by a high-resolution clay mineralogy and grain–size records of Core KNG5 from the northern slope of the South China Sea. Our results indicate that clay minerals are mainly from the Pearl River from 17,500 to12,500calyr BP, and the South China Sea modern current system began to form since 12,500calyr BP, as a result, Taiwan turns to be the major contributor of clay minerals after 12,500calyr BP. Two grain-size populations with high variability through time were identified in the 13–28μm and 1–2.2μm grain-size intervals. The 1–2.2μm grain-size population are mainly controlled by provenance supply and current transport. The 13–28μm grain-size fraction could be controlled mainly by the sea-level change. The 1–2.2μm grain-size population record demonstrates that East Asian Summer Monsoon intensity generally follows changes in insolation and that the response is similar for a large area of China and other northern low-latitude records, implying the globality of the monsoon evolution since Holocene. The anomalous environmental conditions in the northern South China Sea may imply intensified ENSO activity during the late Holocene. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
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