TY - JOUR
T1 - Dramatic weakening of the East Asian summer monsoon in Northern China during the transition from the Medieval Warm period to the little ice age
AU - Lan, Jianghu
AU - Xu, Hai
AU - Lang, Yunchao
AU - Yu, Keke
AU - Zhou, Peng
AU - Kang, Shugang
AU - Zhou, Kangen
AU - Wang, Xulong
AU - Wang, Tianli
AU - Cheng, Peng
AU - Yan, Dongna
AU - Yu, Shiyong
AU - Che, Ping
AU - Ye, Yuanda
AU - Tan, Liangcheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Geological Society of America.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Changes in the intensity of the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) are critical for regulating the regional hydrology, ecology, and human civilization, especially in the vicinity of the summer monsoon limit (SML). However, the detailed spatial variations of the SML in mainland China over the past 2000 years are uncertain due to the lack of high-resolution paleoclimate archives. As a result, the accurate location of the SML during the transition from the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) to the Little Ice Age (LIA), as well as its impacts on ecology and society, are poorly understood. Here, we report a potential location of the SML during the late Holocene by combining data from a lake sedimentary record and a compilation of paleoclimate records from arid northern China. We find that EASM intensity was strong during the MWP and that the SML in arid northern China was roughly located along the Yinshan Mountains, Yabulai Mountains, and north of Lake Qinghai. EASM intensity dramatically weakened during the MWP-LIA transition, and the SML retreated southeastward significantly, which may have primarily but nonlinearly been a response to the reduction in solar irradiance and its associated changes in atmospheric circulation (e.g., El Nino-Southern Oscillation and Siberian High) and could have had profound impacts on hydrology, ecology, and human civilization across northern monsoonal Asia.
AB - Changes in the intensity of the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) are critical for regulating the regional hydrology, ecology, and human civilization, especially in the vicinity of the summer monsoon limit (SML). However, the detailed spatial variations of the SML in mainland China over the past 2000 years are uncertain due to the lack of high-resolution paleoclimate archives. As a result, the accurate location of the SML during the transition from the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) to the Little Ice Age (LIA), as well as its impacts on ecology and society, are poorly understood. Here, we report a potential location of the SML during the late Holocene by combining data from a lake sedimentary record and a compilation of paleoclimate records from arid northern China. We find that EASM intensity was strong during the MWP and that the SML in arid northern China was roughly located along the Yinshan Mountains, Yabulai Mountains, and north of Lake Qinghai. EASM intensity dramatically weakened during the MWP-LIA transition, and the SML retreated southeastward significantly, which may have primarily but nonlinearly been a response to the reduction in solar irradiance and its associated changes in atmospheric circulation (e.g., El Nino-Southern Oscillation and Siberian High) and could have had profound impacts on hydrology, ecology, and human civilization across northern monsoonal Asia.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85084092258
U2 - 10.1130/G46811.1
DO - 10.1130/G46811.1
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85084092258
SN - 0091-7613
VL - 48
JO - Geology
JF - Geology
IS - 4
M1 - 6811
ER -