4.5 Article

A Middle Pleistocene Glaciation Record from Lacustrine Sediments in the Western Tibetan Plateau and Discussion on Climate Change

Journal

ACTA GEOLOGICA SINICA-ENGLISH EDITION
Volume 97, Issue 2, Pages 623-635

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1755-6724.15000

Keywords

glacial record; global climate change; geomagnetic polarity reversal; middle Pleistocene; western Tibetan Plateau

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The lacustrine sedimentary record in the western Tibetan Plateau reveals significant climate and environmental changes between 600 and 700 thousand years ago, likely caused by a geomagnetic polarity reversal. This event may have influenced the global climate pattern and will continue to impact climatic changes in the future.
The Tibetan Plateau is an important area for studying global climate change, but the answers to many scientific problems remain unknown. Here, we present new information from the lacustrine sedimentary record in the western Tibetan Plateau, related to the third most-recent glaciations. Continuous sediment data, including sporopollen, particle size, total organic carbon, mass susceptibility, CaCO3, CaSO4, BaSO4 contents and chronological data, were reconstructed and revealed that climate and environmental conditions obviously and distinctly changed between 600 and 700 thousand years ago. In comparison, the data obtained from the Guliya ice core in this area also corresponds to the global glacial climatic characteristics recorded in basin sediments in the eastern and southeastern regions of the plateau and to the information obtained from ice cores in the Antarctic and Arctic regions. In this study, we conclude that the main reason for the glaciations and new tectonic movement must be a geomagnetic polarity reversal 774 thousand years ago (from Matuyama to Brunhes). Indeed, the results of this study suggest that the described reversal event might have influenced the current global climate pattern and will continue to impact climatic changes in the future.

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