Magnetic fabric from Red clay sediments in the Chinese Loess Plateau

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Abstract

Well-distributed eolian red clay in a wide area of northern China is believed to imply the onset of an ancient East Asian monsoon system since Late Miocene. Two continuous red clay sequences spanning the time interval 7-2.6 Ma and 11-2.6 Ma in the Chinese Loess Plateau was investigated to determine the magnetic orientation and grain alignment in the primary fabric of eolian sediments. The north-westerly orientation of the AMS of the eolian red clay sequences parallels the material transportation direction, which differs from the model that suggests that airborne dust from overlying loess-paleosol sequences were transported by the East Asian winter monsoon and fixed by the East Asian summer monsoon. Our results further reveal that present-day climate and air circulation patterns differ from those of the pre-Quaternary, and may provide evidence of a prevailing wind during deposition of the red clay.

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APA

Gong, H., Zhang, R., Yue, L., Zhang, Y., & Li, J. (2015). Magnetic fabric from Red clay sediments in the Chinese Loess Plateau. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep09706

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