Evolution of vegetation and climate variability on the Tibetan Plateau over the past 1.74 million years
Author(s) -
Yan Zhao,
Polychronis C. Tzedakis,
Quan Li,
Feng Qin,
Qiaoyu Cui,
Liang Chen,
H. J. B. Birks,
Yaoliang Liu,
Zhiyong Zhang,
Junyi Ge,
Hui Zhao,
Vivian A. Felde,
Chenglong Deng,
Maotang Cai,
Huan Li,
Weihe Ren,
Haicheng Wei,
Hanfei Yang,
Jiawu Zhang,
Zicheng Yu,
Zhengtang Guo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aay6193
Subject(s) - plateau (mathematics) , vegetation (pathology) , physical geography , latitude , climate change , geography , climatology , high latitude , ecology , geology , biology , medicine , mathematical analysis , mathematics , geodesy , pathology
The Tibetan Plateau exerts a major influence on Asian climate, but its long-term environmental history remains largely unknown. We present a detailed record of vegetation and climate changes over the past 1.74 million years in a lake sediment core from the Zoige Basin, eastern Tibetan Plateau. Results show three intervals with different orbital- and millennial-scale features superimposed on a stepwise long-term cooling trend. The interval of 1.74-1.54 million years ago is characterized by an insolation-dominated mode with strong ~20,000-year cyclicity and quasi-absent millennial-scale signal. The interval of 1.54-0.62 million years ago represents a transitional insolation-ice mode marked by ~20,000- and ~40,000-year cycles, with superimposed millennial-scale oscillations. The past 620,000 years are characterized by an ice-driven mode with 100,000-year cyclicity and less frequent millennial-scale variability. A pronounced transition occurred 620,000 years ago, as glacial cycles intensified. These new findings reveal how the interaction of low-latitude insolation and high-latitude ice-volume forcing shaped the evolution of the Tibetan Plateau climate.
Accelerating Research
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom
Address
John Eccles HouseRobert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom