To reconstruct the timing and underlying forcing of major shifts in the composition of terrestrial ecosystems in arid Central Asia during the late Cenozoic (past ~7 Ma), we carry out palynological analysis of lake sediments from the Qaidam Basin (NE 2 Tibetan Plateau, China). Our results show that the steppe/semi-desert biomes dominating the Qaidam Basin experienced marked turnovers at ~3.6 and 3.3 Ma. Most notably, the younger of these turnover events is characterized by a two-to threefold expansion of Artemisia at the expense of other steppe/semi-desert taxa. This turnover event led to the replacement of the Ephedraceae/Chenopodiaceaedominated and Nitraria-rich steppe/semi-deserts that were dominant in the Qaidam Basin during the Paleogene and abundant during the Miocene by Artemisia/Chenopodiaceae-dominated steppe/semi-deserts as they exist until today. The vegetation turnover events are synchronous with shifts towards drier conditions in Central Asia as documented in climate records from the Chinese Loess Plateau and the Central North Pacific Ocean. On a global scale, they can be correlated to early glaciation events in the Northern Hemisphere during the Pliocene. Integration of our palynological data from the Qaidam Basin with Northern Hemisphere climateproxy and regional-scale tectonic information suggests that the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau posed ecological pressure on Central Asian plant communities, which made them susceptible to the effects of early Northern Hemisphere glaciations during the late Pliocene. Although these glaciations were relatively small in comparison to their Pleistocene counterparts, the transition towards drier/colder conditions pushed previously existing plant communities beyond their tolerance limits, thereby causing a fundamental reorganization of arid ecosystems. The Artemisia dominance since ~3.3 Ma resulting from this reorganization marks a point in time after which the Artemisia/Chenopodiaceae pollen ratio can serve as a reliable indicator for moisture availability in Central Asia.
Soil and lake sediments are important paleoclimate archives often forming a source-sink setting. To better understand magnetic properties in such settings, we studied red soil on low-magnetic bedrock and subrecent sediments of Caohai Lake (CL) in Heqing Basin, China. Red soil is the only important source material for the CL sediments, it is highly magnetic with susceptibilities (χ) of~10 −5 m 3 /kg. The red soil is dominated by pedogenic nano-magnetite (~10-15 nm) arranged in aggregates of~100 nm, with particle interaction that causes a wide effective grain size distribution in the superparamagnetic (SP) range tailing into stable single-domain behavior. Transmission electron microscopy and broadband frequency χ(f) suggest partial disintegration of the aggregates and increased alteration of the nanoparticles to hematite during transfer of red soil material to CL. This shifts the domain state behavior to smaller effective magnetic grain sizes, resulting in lower χ fd % and χ values, and a characteristic change of χ(f). The SP-stable single-domain distribution of the aggregates in red soil could be climate dependent, and the ratio of saturation remanence to χ is a potential bedrock-specific paleoclimate proxy reflecting it. Magnetic properties of the CL sediments are controlled by an assemblage of nanoparticle aggregates and larger-sized bedrock-derived magnetite. The results challenge the validity of the previous paleoclimate interpretation from the 168-m-long Core-HQ (900-30 ka) in Heqing Basin. Disintegration of aggregates could lead to SP behavior with low χ fd % without extinction of individual magnetite nanoparticles, and the χ fd %-based assumption of SP magnetite dissolution may be wrong.
SUMMARY
Remagnetization is an important issue in palaeomagnetism. Here, we discuss an extraordinarily thick (∼74 m) dual-polarity transition zone between the Gauss and Matuyama Chrons. The studied succession is from a drill core through lacustrine sediments of palaeo-Lake Idaho (Snake River Plain, NW United States of America) that are intercalated with basalt units. We identified detrital Ti-rich titanomagnetite and magnetite in lamellar exsolutions as the main carriers of a primary remanence, likely derived from the basalts that erupted in the Snake River Plain. Stepwise thermal demagnetization revealed a single-component remanent magnetization with reversed and normal polarities above and below the transition zone, respectively. Based on rock-magnetic results, microscopic observations, and previously known events in the evolution of palaeo-Lake Idaho, the reversed-polarity component in the transition zone represents a secondary chemical remanent magnetization caused by magnetic mineral alteration or partial neo-formation of magnetite, in association with strong depletion of the primary detrital magnetic minerals that affected a wide depth range below the level where the remagnetization event occurred. This remagnetization event was most likely related to lake-level lowering and partial desiccation of palaeo-Lake Idaho. Understanding the nature and origin of the remagnetization allows to identify the polarity boundary in the unusual case of a secondary magnetization with reversed polarity produced downward in a sequence to an extraordinary large depth. Based on available age information, the observed reversal represents the Gauss/Matuyama boundary, which provides an important age constraint for palaeoclimatic interpretation of the succession.
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