4.6 Article

Sunspot cycles recorded in Eocene lacustrine fine-grained sedimentary rocks in the Bohai Bay Basin, eastern China

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 205, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2021.103614

Keywords

Annual laminae; Varve; Solar activity cycle; Milankovitch cycles; Cyclostratigraphy; Bohai Bay Basin

Funding

  1. Shengli Oilfield
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41625009, 42102150, U19B6003-01-02]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA14010404]

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This study analyzed the annual laminae in carbonate rocks in the Bohai Bay Basin, revealing solar activity cycles at different scales. The findings suggest that solar activity did not significantly change during the transitional period from a greenhouse to an icehouse climate in the Eocene.
Millennial-to-interannual events play important roles in driving climate change on Earth. However, most studies focus on Quaternary records, and few focus on pre-Quaternary periods due to preservation condition and stratigraphic resolution limitations. Favorable conditions for the preservation of annual laminae are recorded during the Eocene in the Shahejie Formation in the Bohai Bay Basin (BBB), which is an ideal place for studying solar activity cycles. Here, the sedimentary petrology and cyclostratigraphy of 202-m-thick lacustrine finegrained sedimentary rocks during the Eocene from Well Niuye-1 were analyzed. Power spectrum analysis and evolutive harmonic analysis (EHA) of the gray values reveal prominent periodicities of 11.7-19.6 mm, 3.7-4.95 mm and 1.69-2.21 mm, interpreted as Gleissberg cycles, solar Hale cycles and Schwabe sunspot cycles, respectively. Laminar couplets of light and dark laminae have an average thickness of 189 mu m, and their annual origin has been interpreted on meter, centimeter and millimeter scales. The light laminae, composed of pure calcite, likely precipitated during summer. The dark laminae, which are mixtures of clay minerals, quartz debris and organic matter, likely precipitated during winter. The dark laminae are thin, contributing little to the overall thicknesses of the annual laminae except for the abruptly thicker laminae deposited every 10-11 years. The coherent periods at different scales match the solar activity cycles well. The obvious solar activity cycles during the Eocene of the Shahejie Formation in the BBB suggest that solar activity did not significantly change during the transitional period from a greenhouse to an icehouse climate.

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