4.4 Article

Deciphering Oxygen Isotope Records From Chinese Speleothems With an Isotope-Enabled Climate Model

Journal

PALEOCEANOGRAPHY AND PALEOCLIMATOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 12, Pages 2098-2112

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2019PA003741

Keywords

speleothem; isotope-enabled model; water isotopes; monsoon

Funding

  1. Dornsife Merit Fellowship from the University of Southern California (USC)

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Speleothem delta O-18 is widely used to reconstruct past hydroclimate variability, particularly over Asia. However, the interpretation of this proxy is still in debate. While this proxy is originally interpreted as regional rainfall amount of the Asian monsoon, other studies have interpreted it as upstream monsoon rainfall or atmospheric circulation changes. To better understand the signal preserved in speleothems over various time scales, this study employs a state-of-the-art isotope-enabled climate model to quantify contributions to the oxygen isotope composition of precipitation (delta 18OP) over China. Results suggest that orbital-scale speleothem delta O-18 variations at Chinese sites mainly record the meridional migration of the Asian monsoon circulation, accompanied by an early northward movement of the East Asian rain belt. At interannual scales, Chinese speleothem delta O-18 is also tied to the intensity of monsoonal circulation, via a change in moisture source locations: Enhanced moisture delivery from remote source regions leads to more negative delta 18OP, particularly in late summer and early autumn. Our results have implications for the hydroclimatic interpretation of speleothem delta O-18 from Chinese caves and suggest that this interpretation is time scale dependent.

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