4.7 Article

Geochemistry of the Pliocene red clay formation in the Chinese Loess Plateau and implications for its origin, source provenance and paleoclimate change

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 65, Issue 6, Pages 901-913

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0016-7037(00)00571-8

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Recent field observations and sedimentological studies suggest the eolian origin of the late Tertiary red clay formation underlying the Pleistocene loess-soil sequence in the Loess Plateau, thereby extending the wind-blown record from similar to2.6 Ma down to similar to7.0 Ma in north-central China. To address the source provenance of the red clay, major and trace element concentrations were analyzed on the samples from a north-south loess transect of the Loess Plateau and a red clay section at Jiaxian. Results show that there is a good agreement of both major and trace element compositions between the last glacial-interglacial loess-soil units and the Jiaxian red clay record. The REE distribution patterns of the loess-soil and red clay samples ore remarkably similar in shape, with enriched LREE and fairly flat HREE profiles and clear negative Eu anomaly. The geochemical features of the red clay are also identical to thr,sr of upper continental crust. These chemical characteristics provide further evidence for eolian sedimentation of the red clay. From the relations both between Na2O/Al2O3 and K2O/Al2O3 ratios and between U/Pb and Th/Pb ratios, the eolian loess and red clay materials must have been subject to thorough sedimentary differentiation and moderate chemical weathering in the source area. The chemical similarity between soil unit S1 and the red clay implies that uch an environment as occurred in the last interglacial period may have already formed in northwestern China during the late Tertiary. Comparison of down-section variations in elemental ratios with field observations of pedogenic development of the red clay suggests that CaO/Al2O3, Sr/Rb and Sr/Ba are more sensitive to climate changes than magnetic susceptibility. and can be used to reconstruct the climate history of the late Cenozoic. Copyright (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd.

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