2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.11.032
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Genetic linkage between the Yellow River, the Mu Us desert and the Chinese Loess Plateau

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Cited by 235 publications
(231 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
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“…Reduction in wind strength and/or fewer occurrences of dry cold fronts would then be expected since the termination of the glacial maximum, which is confirmed by other paleoclimatic reconstructions (de Garidel-Thoron et al, 2001;Steinke et al, 2011). The grain-size of loess deposits of the CLP also records decreased wind strength during the DG (Nugteren et al, 2004;Stevens et al, 2007). From this independent evidence, weakened wind strength during the DG is proposed to be the most important driver of dune-stabilization near the dune field margin and increased net sand accumulation in the dune field interior.…”
Section: High-northern-latitude Forcing Of Dune Activity In Mid-latitsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…Reduction in wind strength and/or fewer occurrences of dry cold fronts would then be expected since the termination of the glacial maximum, which is confirmed by other paleoclimatic reconstructions (de Garidel-Thoron et al, 2001;Steinke et al, 2011). The grain-size of loess deposits of the CLP also records decreased wind strength during the DG (Nugteren et al, 2004;Stevens et al, 2007). From this independent evidence, weakened wind strength during the DG is proposed to be the most important driver of dune-stabilization near the dune field margin and increased net sand accumulation in the dune field interior.…”
Section: High-northern-latitude Forcing Of Dune Activity In Mid-latitsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…In addition to these deserts, the progressive drying-up of rivers and lakes probably played an important role in contributing dust to the Chinese Loess Plateau (Stevens et al, 2013;. These drying rivers and lakes in fact acted as temporary for detrital materials derived originally from proto-sources such as the high-altitude terrain in the NTP.…”
Section: Dust Provenance Shift During the Late Miocene (95-7 Ma)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead, this sediment has been stored in the Loess Plateau and the western Mu Us desert since at least the Middle Pleistocene . The dust deposition rate of the Loess Plateau is potentially influenced by the uplift and erosion of the northern Tibetan Plateau and the dynamics of the Yellow River system (Stevens et al, 2013). Although the total contribution of the Yellow River to the loess accumulation has not thus far been conclusively assessed (Stevens et al, 2013), fluvial transportation is required in the sequence of events leading to the formation of a loess deposit (Smalley et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%