Back to Search Start Over

Natural and anthropogenic sources of East Asian dust

Authors :
Tim M. Conway
Gaojun Li
Jiedong Yang
Jun Chen
Junfeng Ji
Source :
Geology. 37:727-730
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Geological Society of America, 2009.

Abstract

Nd-Sr isotopic signatures of loess, modern dust, and their potential source materials are systematically investigated to discriminate the natural and anthropogenic sources of eastern Asian dust. Chinese loess is an eolian deposit that has accumulated over the past few million years, and is characterized by a negative Nd-Sr isotopic correlation that implies binary sources for the natural background of eastern Asian dust. Loess in northeastern China shows the highest eNd(0) value, while loess in western China has the lowest eNd(0). Considering the Nd-Sr isotopic signatures of the potential sources, we propose that the high eNd(0) end member is derived from the arid lands around the northern boundary of China while the low eNd(0) end member originates from the deserts on the northern margin of the Tibetan Plateau. Chinese Loess Plateau deposits are dominated by northern margin Tibetan Plateau dust, suggesting a strong link between the thick eolian deposit in this region and the evolution of the Tibetan Plateau. The long-range transported spring dust in both Nanjing (south China) and Japan has an Nd-Sr isotopic composition similar to that of loess. However, spring dust in Beijing (north China) has a much lower eNd(0) value, indicating an additional anthropogenic contribution of low eNd(0) material, possibly from the sandy lands in the adjacent north and west.

Details

ISSN :
19432682 and 00917613
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dd756378111112205c8fcdf90a1e13e5