Publication | Open Access
Holocene climate variability archived in the Puruogangri ice cap on the central Tibetan Plateau
163
Citations
36
References
2006
Year
EngineeringHolocene Climate VariabilityGlacial ProcessEarth ScienceHoloceneCentral Tibetan PlateauGeochronologyClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyGeographyEast Asian LanguagesCryospherePuruogangri Ice CapPaleoclimatologyIce CoresEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyAbstract TwoTibetan Plateau
Abstract Two ice cores (118.4 and 214.7 m in length) were collected in 2000 from the Puruogangri ice cap in the center of the Tibetan Plateau (TP) in a joint US-Chinese collaborative project. These cores yield paleoclimatic and environmental records extending through the Middle Holocene, and complement previous ice-core histories from the Dunde and Guliya ice caps in northeast and northwest Tibet, respectively, and Dasuopu glacier in the Himalaya. The high-resolution Puruogangri climate record since AD 1600 details regional temperature and moisture variability. The post-1920 period is characterized by above-average annual net balance, contemporaneous with the greatest 18O enrichment of the last 400 years, consistent with the isotopically inferred warming observed in other TP ice-core records. On longer timescales the aerosol history reveals large and abrupt events, one of which is dated ∼4.7 kyr BP and occurs close to the time of a drought that extended throughout the tropics and may have been associated with centuries-long weakening of the Asian/Indian/African monsoon system. The Puruogangri climate history, combined with the other TP ice-core records, has the potential to provide valuable information on variations in the strength of the monsoon across the TP during the Holocene.
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