Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published January 30, 2009 | public
Journal Article

Strengthened East Asian summer monsoons during a period of high-latitude warmth? Isotopic evidence from Mio-Pliocene fossil mammals and soil carbonates from northern China

Abstract

The East Asian monsoons have fluctuated in concert with high-latitude warmth during the past several hundred thousand years, with humid summer monsoon-dominant climates characterizing warm intervals, including interglacials and interstadials, and arid winter monsoon-dominant climates characterizing cool intervals, including glacials and stadials. Of the states comprising the mid-Pleistocene to recent climatic regime, interglacials are most similar in terms of high latitude ice volumes and temperatures to those extant during the late Miocene and early Pliocene. Thus, an important question is whether Mio-Pliocene climates in northern China were analogous to a hypothetical 'prolonged interglacial state,' with increased summer monsoon precipitation and expansion of forest and steppe environments at the expense of desert environments. We utilize new and previously published carbon isotopic data from fossil teeth and soil carbonates to place constraints on paleovegetation distributions and to help infer the behavior of the monsoon system between ~7 and 4 Ma. We find that plants using the C_4 photosynthetic pathway -— which today are largely grasses found in regions with warm season precipitation -— were present in northern China by late Miocene time, demonstrating that the C_4 expansion in China was not significantly delayed compared to the global C4 event. During the late Miocene–early Pliocene interval, soil carbonate and tooth enamel δ^(13)C data indicate: 1) that nearly pure C_3-plant ecosystems existed in the southern Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP), and therefore ecosystems there were dominated by woody dicot, herbaceous dicot, or cool-season grass vegetation (or a combination of these), and 2) that the CLP was characterized by a pattern of northward-increasing C_4 vegetation and aridity. Utilizing a broadened conceptual model for interpreting δ^(13)C data, and citing independent faunal, floral, and lithostratgraphic data, we suggest that these patterns reflect northward expansion of forest and steppe ecosystems and relatively humid monsoon climates during the late Miocene and early Pliocene. An important implication of this interpretation is that the forcing mechanism illuminated by the temporal correlation during the Pleistocene between warm high latitudes and strong East Asian summer monsoons is a robust feature of the Eurasian tectonic–climatic system that predates the Plio-Pleistocene climatic reorganization.

Additional Information

© 2008 Elsevier B.V. Received 27 June 2008; revised 27 October 2008; accepted 10 November 2008. Editor: P. deMenocal. Available online 5 December 2008. We thank L.P. Liu, T. Jokela, A. Karme, W. Zhou, and J. Peel for providing assistance with field, laboratory, and museum work. We are grateful to the Academy of Finland, the National Geographic Society, National Science Foundation China, National Science Foundation USA, the Packard Foundation, the Geological Society of America, and the Associated Students of the University of Utah for providing the funding. We thank David Rea, Yang Shiling, and Jiang Wenying for sharing electronic files of previously published data, and Larry Flynn for reviewing the Yushe chronology. We thank Han Jintai and an anonymous reviewer for providing comments and criticisms that helped to improve the clarity of this paper.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023