East Asian monsoon variability since the Mid-Holocene recorded in a high-resolution, absolute-dated aragonite speleothem from eastern China

Paleoclimatic conditions associated with the East Asian monsoon are reconstructed for the Mid- to Late-Holocene using δ 18O values (819 measurements) from a precisely dated (10 230Th dates) aragonite stalagmite from Lianhua Cave, Hunan Province, China. δ 18O values (− 1.6‰ to − 7.0‰) are interpreted...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEarth and planetary science letters Vol. 275; no. 3; pp. 296 - 307
Main Authors Cosford, Jason, Qing, Hairuo, Eglington, Bruce, Mattey, Dave, Yuan, Daoxiang, Zhang, Meiliang, Cheng, Hai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 15.11.2008
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Paleoclimatic conditions associated with the East Asian monsoon are reconstructed for the Mid- to Late-Holocene using δ 18O values (819 measurements) from a precisely dated (10 230Th dates) aragonite stalagmite from Lianhua Cave, Hunan Province, China. δ 18O values (− 1.6‰ to − 7.0‰) are interpreted to reflect the precipitation amount effect related to the strength of summer monsoonal circulation. Throughout this period, the intensity of East Asian summer monsoonal circulation declined in response to changes in insolation and a southward shift in the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Punctuating this first-order trend are abrupt millennial- to decadal-scale fluctuations, the most prominent of which occurred around 3337 ± 5 yr BP and records a dramatic weakening in summer monsoonal circulation that coincides with the beginning of Neoglacial conditions. Comparisons between the δ 18O values of stalagmite A1 and previously published data from stalagmite HS-4 from Heshang Cave and stalagmites D4 and DA from Dongge Cave, China, demonstrate a similar regional response to changes in East Asian monsoonal circulation. Several spectral analysis techniques and wavelet analysis were applied to these stalagmite records to evaluate the nature and character of cyclicity in the East Asian monsoon during the Holocene. Multi-Taper Method (MTM), Lomb–Scargle, and Single Spectrum Analysis (SSA) results reveal common periodicities that are unlikely to be artifacts of any single technique. The periodicities expressed in the stalagmite δ 18O records occur at both solar and non-solar frequencies and support previous interpretations that variability in monsoonal circulation responds to both solar forcing and internal climatic mechanisms. Wavelet analysis demonstrates that some of these frequencies are intermittent and recur at semi-regular intervals, which may indicate long-term cyclicity that is unconstrained by the chronology of the record.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0012-821X
1385-013X
DOI:10.1016/j.epsl.2008.08.018