Abstract Post-middle Miocene changes in climate and ecology in the northern Tibetan Plateau have been attributed to tectonic uplift and global climate change. However, the relative roles of tectonism and… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Post-middle Miocene changes in climate and ecology in the northern Tibetan Plateau have been attributed to tectonic uplift and global climate change. However, the relative roles of tectonism and global climate change have been a long-standing debate. To untangle the complex influences of global climate change versus the tectonism on regional climate and ecology in the northern Tibetan Plateau, we studied carbon isotopes (δ13Cwax) of leaf wax long-chain n-alkanes and carbon (δ13C) and oxygen isotopes (δ18O) of carbonates from three stratigraphic successions (ca. 16 Ma to 2 Ma) in the Hexi Corridor (foreland basin) and compare them with paleoclimate records in the Qaidam Basin (intermontane basin). Our isotopic results can be divided into two stages. In Stage 1 (16–12 Ma), a decrease of δ13Cwax values in the Hexi Corridor and Qaidam Basin is synchronous with global cooling after the Mid-Miocene Climate Optimum (MMCO). We interpret the 2‰ decrease in δ13Cwax values to be associated with the decline in C4 plants due to the global cooling. In Stage 2 (since 12 Ma), plant carbon isotope discrimination (ƐCO2-wax) and δ18O values in the Hexi Corridor reflect relatively stable hydroclimate condition, which contracts with the enhanced aridity in Qaidam Basin during the same interval. We attribute the difference in paleohydrological conditions to the uplift-induced basin isolation and the enhancement of water deficiency in the Qaidam Basin. The effects of late Miocene uplift also manifest as persistent intra-basinal differences in the Hexi Corridor, indicating changes associated with orographic precipitation and ecology.
               
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