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Astronomical forcing of terrestrial climate recorded in the Pleistocene of the western Tarim Basin, NW China

Abstract Astronomically forced variations of climate are well documented in lacustrine and marine settings. However, few studies have examined astronomical forced cycles within Quaternary fluvial-fan successions. To explore whether Milankovitch… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Astronomically forced variations of climate are well documented in lacustrine and marine settings. However, few studies have examined astronomical forced cycles within Quaternary fluvial-fan successions. To explore whether Milankovitch cyclicity might also be present in fluvial-fan successions, we carried out high-resolution gamma-ray (GR) from downhole logging, magnetic susceptibility (MS), Rb/Sr and total organic carbon (TOC) analysis of a core from an 800-m borehole (KT11) from the Kashgar region in the western Tarim Basin, China. Spectral analyses of the GR, MS and Rb/Sr data reveal cycles with ~70 m, ~30 m and ~14 m wavelengths. These pertain to relative variations in grain size. Electron spin resonance (ESR) dating and magnetostratigraphy imply that the cored interval spans the past 1.1 Myr. This age-span constraint, coupled with the comparison of the ratios of these cycle wavelengths to expected ratios of Milankovitch frequencies, suggests that these cycles represent ~100-kyr short-eccentricity, ~40-kyr obliquity and ~20-kyr precession frequencies, respectively. We constructed an astronomical time scale (ATS) spanning the past 1.13 Myr using the ~100-kyr short-eccentricity period. The average accumulation rate is about 70 cm/kyr for this 800-m core succession, and the evolutive spectrum emphasizes that long-term sedimentation rates were stable. We also applied correlation coefficient (COCO) analysis to identify the astronomical forcing. Thus, we conclude that orbitally forced climate change was the main driver of stratigraphic alternations between sand- and clay-rich intervals in the Kashgar region. During maxima of the 100-kyr short-eccentricity cycles, which correspond to interglacial intervals, more chemical weathering and increased seasonal runoff delivered a larger amount of relatively coarser-grained sediments to the fluvial fan in the Kashgar region, and vice versa. The Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT) at ca. 0.9 to 0.65 Ma is also well recorded in our GR and Rb/Sr data, and is characterized by a shift in dominant cycle period from 41 kyr obliquity to 100 kyr eccentricity. After 0.65 Ma, the average TOC content decreases whilst Rb/Sr values increase, which suggests that there was an increase in regional aridity of the Kashgar region in the western Tarim Basin following the MPT. This regional change is synchronous with the trend toward aridification observed throughout central Asia.

Keywords: tarim basin; 100 kyr; kashgar region; basin china; western tarim

Journal Title: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Year Published: 2019

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