4.8 Article

Eccentricity-paced monsoon variability on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau in the Late Oligocene high CO2 world

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 7, Issue 51, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abk2318

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Strategic Priority Research Program [XDB 40000000]
  2. Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research (STEP) program [2019QZKK0707]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42074076]

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The study suggests that in the Late Oligocene high CO2 world, precipitation variability on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau was primarily influenced by low-latitude summer insolation and fluctuations of the Antarctic Ice Sheet.
Constraining monsoon variability and dynamics in the warm unipolar icehouse world of the Late Oligocene can provide important clues to future climate responses to global warming. Here, we present a similar to 4-thousand year (ka) resolution rubidium-to-strontium ratio and magnetic susceptibility records between 28.1 and 24.1 million years ago from a distal alluvial sedimentary sequence in the Lanzhou Basin (China) on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau margin. These Asian monsoon precipitation records exhibit prominent short (similar to 110-ka) and long (405-ka) eccentricity cycles throughout the Late Oligocene, with a weak expression of obliquity (41-ka) and precession (19-ka and 23-ka) cycles. We conclude that a combination of eccentricity-modulated low-latitude summer insolation and glacial-interglacial Antarctic Ice Sheet fluctuations drove the eccentricity-paced precipitation variability on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau in the Late Oligocene high CO2 world by governing regional temperatures, water vapor loading in the western Pacific and Indian Oceans, and the Asian monsoon intensity and displacement.

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