Fe-oxide mineralogy of the Jiujiang red earth sediments and implications for Quaternary climate change, southern China

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Abstract

Diffuse reflectance spectrophotometry (DRS) is a new, fast, and reliable method to characterize Fe-oxides in soils. The Fe-oxide mineralogy of the Jiujiang red earth sediments was investigated using DRS to investigate the climate evolution of southern China since the mid-Pleistocene. The DRS results show that hematite/(hematite + goethite) ratios [Hm/(Hm + Gt)] exhibit an upward decreasing trend within the Jiujiang section, suggesting a gradual climate change from warm and humid in the middle Pleistocene to cooler and drier in the late Pleistocene. Upsection trends toward higher (orthoclase + plagioclase)/quartz ratios [(Or + Pl)/Q] and magnetic susceptibility values (χlf) support this inference, which accords with global climate trends at that time. However, higher-frequency climatic subcycles observed in loess sections of northern China are not evident in the Jiujiang records, indicating a relatively lower climate sensitivity of the red earth sediments in southern China.

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Yin, K., Hong, H., Algeo, T. J., Churchman, G. J., Li, Z., Zhu, Z., … Duan, Z. (2018). Fe-oxide mineralogy of the Jiujiang red earth sediments and implications for Quaternary climate change, southern China. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-20119-4

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