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  1. Bendick, R. (Ed.)
    The Qaidam Basin in the core area of arid Inner Asia has been considered undergoing continuous aridification over the Cenozoic. However, the Qaidam Basin is marked with expanded lacustrine sedimentation during the Oligocene, which contrasts with the fluvial or deltaic facies stratigraphically below (Eocene) and above (Miocene-present). The Oligocene lacustrine expansion challenges the idea of persistent aridification. To solve the conundrum, we reconstruct a long-term compound-specific hydrogen isotope (δ2H) record from sedimentary leaf wax n-alkanes to evaluate the paleoclimatic context before, during, and after the Oligocene lacustrine expansion. The δ2H results reveal three shifts at ca. 40 Ma, 34 Ma, and 24 Ma. The leaf wax δ2H values range from −176.8to −166.7from 51 to 40 Ma, followed by an abrupt increase of 23.9at 40 Ma. We interpret this rapid increase as enhanced aridification due to the coeval retreat of the Paratethys Sea from the region. At 34 Ma, the δ2H plunges across the Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT). Post-EOT δ2H values are the lowest, vary with high amplitude from −187.1to −153.2, and are associated with the lacustrine facies expansion, indicating a wetter climate. By compiling the regional isotopic proxy studies, we observe the contrasting patterns in paleohydrology conditions since the EOT: the relaxation of aridity in the westerlies region versus the enhanced aridification in the East Asian summer monsoon region. We interpret that the west-east contrasting patterns represent the different climatic responses to global cooling: wetting in the west as a result of the enhanced moisture transport via westerlies replacing the subtropical high, and drying in the east due to the reduction in moisture content associated with weakening East Asian summer monsoon. Wetting in Inner Asia is synchronous with cooling in the ocean (North Atlantic) and on land (Xining Basin). Since 24 Ma, δ2H increases in response to warming during the latest Oligocene to the early Miocene when the subtropical high re-occupied Inner Asia, causing the aridity. This study reveals a dynamic climate in Inner Asia with different mechanisms responding to global change. 
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  2. Singer, B. ; Jiang, G. (Ed.)
    The Qaidam Basin marks a crucial boundary between the Westerlies and the Asian summer monsoons. Previous studies in the Qaidam Basin have advanced our knowledge of the paleoclimate over glacial to interglacial cycles. However, our understanding of the paleoclimatic sensitivity of the Qaidam Basin to the relative strength of these two climatic driving forces remains limited due to the lack of regional paleoclimatic reconstructions. The Qaidam Basin is proposed as a regional and global eolian dust source during the glacial periods, during which a cold, dry climate is associated with the equatorward shift of the jet stream. On the contrary, paleoshoreline records suggest that a highstand lake stage prevailed in late Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3) and lasted until 15 ka. To address this conundrum, we have applied an integrated approach to reconstructing the regional paleoclimatic history by combining compound-specific isotope analysis, lake temperature reconstruction, and numerical modeling. Our results show varying paleoclimate associated with the dynamic climate boundary since 45 ka: (1) a wet climate during late MIS 3, when the Asian summer monsoons are strengthened under high summer insolation and penetrate further into Central Asia; (2) a general cold, dry but wetter than at present climate in the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), when the Asian summer monsoons retreat and the Westerlies become dominant; and (3) three short periods of extreme aridity corresponding to the Younger Dryas and Heinrich 2 and 4 events, when the normal moisture transport via the Westerlies and Asian summer monsoons is interrupted. The numerical modeling supports an increase in the effective precipitation during the LGM due to reduced evaporation under low summer insolation. These results suggest that the Westerlies and Asian summer monsoons alternately controlled the climate in the Qaidam Basin in response to precessional forcing during the late Pleistocene. 
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