Pre-Quaternary Asian dust accumulation rate increases were caused by monsoon-driven erosion increases. Theories of late Cenozoic climate cooling assume that central Asian aridification and high dust accumulation rates in the… Click to show full abstract
Pre-Quaternary Asian dust accumulation rate increases were caused by monsoon-driven erosion increases. Theories of late Cenozoic climate cooling assume that central Asian aridification and high dust accumulation rates in the Chinese Loess Plateau and the North Pacific Ocean are genetically related. On the basis of detailed sediment provenance analysis, we show that high dust accumulation rates in the Chinese Loess Plateau and the North Pacific Ocean during the late Miocene-Pliocene were mainly caused by increased erosion in the Qilian Mountains and low-elevation eastern Asia areas, driven by the effects of East Asian summer monsoon intensification. We conclude that precipitation-driven erosion increased dust input to the North Pacific Ocean and may have played a pivotal role in late Cenozoic climate cooling.
               
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