Global warming-induced Asian hydrological climate transition across the Miocene–Pliocene boundary
Ao, Hong; Rohling, Eelco J.; Zhang, Ran; Roberts, Andrew P.; Holbourn, Ann E.; Ladant, Jean Baptiste; Dupont-Nivet, Guillaume; Kuhnt, Wolfgang; Zhang, Peng; Wu, Feng; Dekkers, Mark J.; Liu, Qingsong; Liu, Zhonghui; Xu, Yong; Poulsen, Christopher J.; Licht, Alexis; Sun, Qiang; Chiang, John C.H.; Liu, Xiaodong; Wu, Guoxiong; Ma, Chao; Zhou, Weijian; Jin, Zhangdong; Li, Xinxia; Li, Xinzhou; Peng, Xianzhe; Qiang, Xiaoke; An, Zhisheng
(2021) Nature Communications, volume 12, issue 1, pp. 1 - 13
(Article)
Abstract
Across the Miocene–Pliocene boundary (MPB; 5.3 million years ago, Ma), late Miocene cooling gave way to the early-to-middle Pliocene Warm Period. This transition, across which atmospheric CO2 concentrations increased to levels similar to present, holds potential for deciphering regional climate responses in Asia—currently home to more than half of the
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world’s population— to global climate change. Here we find that CO2-induced MPB warming both increased summer monsoon moisture transport over East Asia, and enhanced aridification over large parts of Central Asia by increasing evaporation, based on integration of our ~1–2-thousand-year (kyr) resolution summer monsoon records from the Chinese Loess Plateau aeolian red clay with existing terrestrial records, land-sea correlations, and climate model simulations. Our results offer palaeoclimate-based support for ‘wet-gets-wetter and dry-gets-drier’ projections of future regional hydroclimate responses to sustained anthropogenic forcing. Moreover, our high-resolution monsoon records reveal a dynamic response to eccentricity modulation of solar insolation, with predominant 405-kyr and ~100-kyr periodicities between 8.1 and 3.4 Ma.
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Keywords: Chemistry(all), Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all), Physics and Astronomy(all)
ISSN: 2041-1723
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Note: Funding Information: This study was supported financially by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Strategic Priority Research Program (XDB 40000000), the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research (STEP) program (2019QZKK0707), the Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences (QYZDB-SSW-DQC021), the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Ministry of Science and Technology of China, Australian Research Council (ARC) Australian Laureate Fellowship grant FL120100050 to E.J.R., ARC grant DP120103952 to A.P.R., ERC consolidator grant MAGIC 649081 to G.D.-N., and Heising-Simons Foundation Grant #2016-05 to C.J.P. Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s).
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