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Title: Orbital Forcing of Late Miocene–Early Pleistocene Environmental Change in the Zhada Basin, SW Tibetan Plateau
Abstract

Mechanisms controlling the long‐ and short‐term variability of the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) and high‐elevation environmental change have largely been examined using low‐elevation or marine records with less emphasis on high‐elevation non‐marine records. We address this using a high‐resolution, long‐term record from upper Miocene–lower Pleistocene (~9.0–2.2 Ma) fluvio‐lacustrine strata in the Zhada Basin, southwestern Tibetan Plateau. Long‐term changes include the onset of lacustrine deposition, a decrease in mean grain size, and an increase in δ18Ocarband δ13Ccarbvalues at ~6.0 Ma in response to basin closure following regional extension. This was followed by a return to palustrine/fluvial deposition, an increase in mean grain size, and a decrease in δ18Ocarband δ13Ccarbvalues at ~3.5 Ma in response to tectonically driven long‐term ISM weakening. Spectral analysis reveals that high‐frequency variations in the δ18Ocarbrecord are dominated by 100 and ~20 kyr cycles from ~6.0–2.2 Ma. Wavelet and spectral analysis of the most densely sampled interval (4.23–3.55 Ma), tuned to the record of daily insolation (21 June at 35°N) confirms and highlights 100 and 20 kyr cycles. The tuned Pliocene δ18Ocarbrecord is coherent with the record of Northern Hemisphere insolation at precession periods but not at obliquity or eccentricity periods. Additionally, the tuned δ18Ocarbrecord is anticorrelated to the insolation record, indicating that stronger Northern Hemisphere insolation correlates with a stronger ISM. These results suggest that variations in daily insolation drove late Miocene–early Pleistocene high‐frequency ISM variability and environmental changes in the high‐elevation southwestern Tibetan Plateau.

 
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NSF-PAR ID:
10377434
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Volume:
35
Issue:
8
ISSN:
2572-4517
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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