Abstract
Biogenic reefs and carbonate platforms are valuable natural resources, playing an important role in modulating the global climate and in carbon cycles through biological processes. Biogenic reefs in the Xisha (Paracel) Islands began in the late Oligocene and covaried with the deep-sea basin of the South China Sea and with the aeolian deposit in the Chinese Loess Plateau. Core XK-1 was drilled into the Xisha Islands to their granitic base and well dated by magnetostratigraphy, offering an opportunity to reveal the details of how the Xisha reefs initiated. In this report, the lower section of the biogenic reefs (23.0–24.5 Ma) was sampled for studying magnetic properties. The main results are as follows: (1) magnetic minerals in the XK-1 biogenic reefs are dominated by low-coercivity and relatively coarse-grained magnetite; (2) the variabilities of magnetic parameters can be clustered into two sections around 23.6 Ma, and the differences between the two units are evident both in the amplitudes and the means; and (3) changes in the concentration-dependent magnetic parameters can be well correlated with the records of global deep-sea oxygen and carbon isotopes, and the sea level during the Oligo–Miocene boundary. Based on these results, a close link was inferred between biogenic reef evolution in the Xisha Islands and global climate change. This link likely highlights the covariation or the dominant role of the Asian monsoon in biogenic reefs and involves different responses to global temperature, CO2, and sea-level changes on various timescales. Therefore, we proposed that the origin of biogenic reefs in the Xisha Islands was likely paced by orbital obliquity from a long-term perspective.
Highlights
Tropical reefs are composed of corals, algae, and other reef-building organisms with an anti-wave structure
Changes in Magnetic Parameters χARM is usually sensitive to single-domain (SD) grains [46,47], and SIRM can be used to infer magnetic particles excluding the influence of superparamagnetic (SP) grains [48]
Xisha (Paracel) Islands, South China Sea, the detailed response of biogenic reefs to global climate change was revealed during the Oligo–Miocene transition
Summary
Tropical reefs are composed of corals, algae, and other reef-building organisms with an anti-wave structure. Accounting for a quarter of the global annual carbonate production [1,2], biogenic reefs are critical in revealing the links and interactions between mid- and high-latitude environmental processes from the perspective of tropical oceans. They are all suffering a continuous decline and bleaching in the context of global warming and ocean acidification [3,4,5]. The changing hydrochemical characteristics in geological timescales may control coral evolution [15], and
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