Terrestrial carbonate oxygen isotopes constraints on the interplay between westerlies and monsoonal rains modulating the Cenozoic climate on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau

The relative contribution of the westerlies and the Asian monsoon has played a critical role in regulating the evolution of the Cenozoic Asian interior environment in response to regional tectonic uplift and global climate change. Here, we reconstruct a long-term record of atmospheric moisture oxyge...

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Published inPalaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology Vol. 608; p. 111289
Main Authors Yang, Yibo, Fang, Xiaomin, Han, Wenxia, Wang, Yongli, Galy, Albert
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 15.12.2022
Elsevier
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Summary:The relative contribution of the westerlies and the Asian monsoon has played a critical role in regulating the evolution of the Cenozoic Asian interior environment in response to regional tectonic uplift and global climate change. Here, we reconstruct a long-term record of atmospheric moisture oxygen isotopes in the Asian interior using the oxygen isotopic composition of authigenic carbonates in terrestrial sediments from the Xining Basin on the northeastern Tibetan Plateau spanning the last 52 Myrs. On the VPDB scale, the average carbonate δ18O is characterised by a long-term decrease from −1.5‰ at ca. 43 Ma to −7.5‰ at 33 Ma and smaller variations from −7‰ to −8.5‰ after 33 Ma, with the exception of one period that contains samples with higher δ18O values at −6‰ at 17–14 Ma. At the same time, there is a corresponding long-term rise in average carbon isotope δ13C values from −9.5‰ at ca. 43 Ma to −3.5‰ at 33 Ma, followed by a less variable but similar variation in δ18O values after 33 Ma. The oxygen and carbonate isotopic compositions are negatively correlated before 33 Ma and positively after, suggesting a transition at ∼33 Ma in the context of atmospheric circulation coupled with regional aridity. The δ18O record can be explained by a simple binary mixing model of the atmospheric moisture between the recycling moisture with a positive δ18O value in the westerlies-dominated region and the monsoon rainfall or related moisture with a negative δ18O value from the Indo-Pacific Ocean. In that case, the first-order carbonate δ18O decrease from ca. 43 Ma to 33 Ma was primarily controlled by the retreat of the Para-Tethys Sea, which induced a remarkable decline in westerly rainfall relative to the monsoon. After ∼33 Ma, the contribution from the westerlies could be constant and the lower limits of the carbonate δ18O values are modelled by episodic increases in monsoon rainfall corresponding to enhanced Asian monsoon periods at 26–24 Ma, 17–14 Ma, and 9–8 Ma induced by the tectonic uplift of the Tibetan Plateau and the global climate. Our study, also, suggests that the Oligocene was a transitional stage of moisture sources from the dominance of Eocene westerlies to the Miocene-Quaternary monsoon in continental Asian environments. •Carbonate stable oxygen and carbon isotopic records since 52 Ma in the Xining Basin.•Correlation between carbonate oxygen and carbon isotopes has changed since 33 Ma.•Change in westerly and monsoon moisture amount regulates moisture oxygen isotope.•Decrease in carbonate δ18O before 33 Ma is induced by a decline in westerly rainfall.•Episodic increases in monsoon rainfall occur at 26–24 Ma, 17–14 Ma, and 9–8 Ma.
ISSN:0031-0182
1872-616X
DOI:10.1016/j.palaeo.2022.111289