Mid-late Holocene hydroclimate variation in the source region of the Yangtze River revealed by lake sediment records

Author(s):  
Hou Xiaohuan ◽  
Liu Lina ◽  
Sun Zhe ◽  
Cao Xianyong ◽  
Hou Juzhi

<p>The headwater region of the Yangtze River serves as major constituent of Chinese Water Tower and is critical in providing fresh water for hundreds of millions of people living downstream. Hydrological variation is mainly influenced by environmental changes. Therefore, a good understanding of climate changes in the source region of the Yangtze River (SRYR) is of great significance. Here, we provide a lacustrine sediment core from Saiyong Co in SRYR, northeastern Tibetan Plateau, China, to reconstruct hydrological variation and the main influencing factors based on the analysis of grain size, scanning XRF, loss on ignition (LOI), which cover the past 6 ka. It is remarkable that total organic matter (LOI-550℃) exhibits opposite patterns regarding to the PC1 of XRF, which represents the allochthonous input, indicating the majority of organic matter was mainly yielded within the lake. Clustering of palaeohydrological proxies, such as the reduced PC1 and increase in median grain size, seems coincide with the weakened strength of the Indian summer monsoon, which suggest a generally dry trend in the SRYR during the mid-late Holocene. However, short pulses of outrageous period occurred at 3.8-3.2 ka BP and 1.5-1.0 ka BP. The abrupt increase in PC1 and very coarse silt indicate the lake catchment became more humid with higher surface runoff, which is consistent with weaker lake productivity. The inferred hydrological change in SRYR since 6 ka BP not only have significant environmental influence, but also agree with other sequences from Tibetan Plateau and the adjacent regions This study provides long-term records of paleoenvironmental evolution which is particularly significant to understand recent and to predict future hydrological change in SRYR.</p>

The Holocene ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (9) ◽  
pp. 1318-1324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiantao Xue ◽  
Jingjing Li ◽  
Xinyue Dang ◽  
Philip A Meyers ◽  
Xianyu Huang

We have reconstructed the history of late-Holocene paleohydrological changes in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River using grain size and n-alkane data from a sediment core retrieved from Longgan Lake. We employ changes in the grain size distribution to reflect the water level in the floodplain lake, with a higher percentage of the finer fraction indicating higher water level and vice versa. The n-alkane molecular distribution, average chain length (ACL), and Paq ratio (C23+C25)/(C23+C25+C29+C31) are used to reflect mainly vegetation composition that is also sensitive to water depth. Our results reveal that the lake water level was relatively low and gradually increased from 4 to 2.7 ka. The period from 2.7 to 1.2 ka exhibited the highest late-Holocene lake water level in this region. The water level then decreased toward the present. This paleohydrological reconstruction agrees with existing paleoclimate reconstructions of the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, confirming that the intensity of Asian monsoon rains is an important factor in affecting paleohydrological changes in this region.


2020 ◽  
Vol 95 ◽  
pp. 84-96
Author(s):  
Gang Xu ◽  
Jian Liu ◽  
Marcello Gugliotta ◽  
Yoshiki Saito ◽  
Lilei Chen ◽  
...  

AbstractThis paper presents geochemical and grain-size records since the early Holocene in core ECS0702 with a fine chronology frame obtained from the Yangtze River subaqueous delta front. Since ~9500 cal yr BP, the proxy records of chemical weathering from the Yangtze River basin generally exhibit a Holocene optimum in the early Holocene, a weak East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) period during the middle Holocene, and a relatively strong EASM period in the late Holocene. The ~8.2 and ~4.4 cal ka BP cooling events are recorded in core ECS0702. The flooding events reconstructed by the grain-size parameters since the early Holocene suggest that the floods mainly occurred during strong EASM periods and the Yangtze River mouth sandbar caused by the floods mainly formed in the early and late Holocene. The Yangtze River-mouth sandbars since the early Holocene shifted from north to south, affected by tidal currents and the Coriolis force, and more importantly, controlled by the EASM. Our results are of great significance for enriching both the record of Holocene climate change in the Yangtze River basin and knowledge about the formation and evolution progress of the deltas located in monsoon regions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chongyi E ◽  
Hongchang Hu ◽  
Hong Xie ◽  
Yongjuan Sun

The study of temperature change and its elevation dependency in the source region of the Yangtze River and Yellow River have been insufficient owing to the lack of adequate observation stations and long-term climatic data. In this study five temperature indices of 32 stations from 1961 to 2007 in and near the source region are used. The 32 stations all have experienced significant warming; the warming amplitudes are higher than the mean warming amplitude of the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau. The warming amplitudes and the numbers of stations showing significant warming trends in mean minimum temperature and extreme minimum temperature are higher than that of the mean maximum temperature and extreme maximum temperature. The elevation dependency of climatic warming and the amount of significant warming stations are not obvious; the influence of human activity and urbanization may be higher. The warming amplitudes of 26 stations above 3000 m tend to be uniform, and there is no significant law at 6 stations below 3000 m. On the contrary, the ratio of stations showing significant warming in minimum temperature above 4000 m is far less than that of the stations below 4000 m.


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