Abstract

ABSTRACTDeciphering the source(s) of sediment deposited in Hugunagyan Lake in South China using magnetic properties will advance our understanding of the evolution of East Asian monsoon systems. However, the source of magnetic minerals in the surface sediments of this lake is unknown, still needing further exploration. Due to simple hydrological systems, the Hugunagyan Lake provides a unique record for investigating the magnetic property of sediments and surface processes. In this study, based on the magnetic properties of 43 surface sediment, 12 surface soil, and 7 volcanic rock samples from the catchment, we demonstrate that the magnetic minerals in sediments were dominated by fine super paramagnetic magnetic particles, with coexistence of pseudo‐single‐domain states minerals. There are no signatures showing the presence of biogenic and authigenic magnetite. The magnetic properties of surface sediments display significant differences between the potential sources of aeolian dust from the loess in North China and modern surface soils in Central Asia, suggesting that the magnetic minerals mainly originate from the weathered materials in the catchment, and there are no further signals of winter monsoon‐driven aeolian dust input.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call