4.7 Review

Biogeochemical evidence of Holocene East Asian summer and winter monsoon variability from a tropical maar lake in southern China

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 111, Issue -, Pages 51-61

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.01.002

Keywords

East Asian monsoon; Holocene; Tropical lake record; Isotope proxy; ENSO

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA05080404]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China [2010CB833405]
  3. 135 project of Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry [Y234091001]

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Lake Huguangyan (21 degrees 9' N, 110 degrees 17' E), a maar lake located near the South China Sea, can provide valuable sedimentary data regarding past changes of the East Asian monsoonal system. Here, we used the proxies of TOC, delta(13)Corg, delta N-15, and leaf wax n-alkane delta C-13 values (delta C-13(wax)) to reconstruct the lake conditions, which, in turn, revealed patterns in monsoonal changes during the Holocene. Two distinct patterns of proxy changes were identified in the sedimentary profile. A marked shift in the delta C-13(wax) value at similar to 9.2 ka (thousand years ago) suggests the abrupt disappearance of C-4 plants, signaling the enhancement of East Asian summer monsoon (EASM). Between 9.2 and 1.8 ka, a nearly pure C-3 terrestrial ecosystem was present, with the climax at ca 7-6 ka. After ca 3 ka, fewer tropical species and a reappearance of C-4 plants at 1.8 ka indicate a weakened EASM in the late Holocene. The TOC concentration and delta N-15 value proxies appear to be associated with lake aquatic production and upwelled nutrient supply and utilization, which are modulated by, and thus indicative of, the strength of the East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM). The two EAWM records suggest a weakening trend from the early to late Holocene, with the most significant transition at similar to 6 ka; thus, the EAWM trend was broadly in-phase with that of the EASM. However, the marked EASM intensification at 9.2 ka occurred within the period of a strong EAWM between 10.5 and 6 ka and lagged the monsoonal enhancement as inferred from the Dongge Cave delta O-18 values. Our EASM records displays an overall arid-wet-arid pattern, which is in-phase with the hydrological variability in tropical Australia and anti-phase with that in the outer-tropical Andes. These phase relationships might be linked to changes in the thermal state of the tropical Pacific during the Holocene. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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