Increasing Spring Insolation in the Late Holocene Intensified Aeolian Activity in Dryland Asia

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Abstract

The history and driving forces of aeolian activity in western Mongolia remain poorly understood due to the scarcity of geological archives. Here, we obtained a record of sediment grain size from Tolbo Lake in western Mongolia to reconstruct changes in aeolian activity since ∼14 ka. The results suggest that intensified aeolian activity in the late Holocene may mainly have been a response to stronger surface winds resulting from an increase in spring insolation and mountain snow. The stable weak aeolian activity appears to coincide with ice-rafting events in the North Atlantic during the middle Holocene and may be a response to warming at northern high latitudes, increased humidity and vegetation coverage in western Mongolia, indicating that dust from western Mongolia would possibly contribute minimally to dust deposition in Greenland during this period. This study will help understand the atmospheric dust emissions and transport processes in the earth system.

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Zhang, J., Huang, X., Qiang, M., Demberel, O., Wang, W., Zheng, M., … Xiao, J. (2022). Increasing Spring Insolation in the Late Holocene Intensified Aeolian Activity in Dryland Asia. Geophysical Research Letters, 49(24). https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL101777

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