Abstract

AbstractWe report the first complete loess–paleosol record spanning the last 130 kyr from the southern extremity of the Hunshandake Sandy Land (HSL) in central‐eastern Mongolia. Our combined mineral magnetic and geochemical results demonstrate that during the last interglacial, the front of the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) extended to central‐eastern Inner Mongolia, consistent with modern observations of climate change. However, during the last glacial, typical magnetic parameters (e.g., magnetic susceptibility and anhysteretic remanent magnetization and their ratios), which have been successfully adopted to denote the EASM variations on the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP), show only muted temporal variations and cannot be readily correlated with equivalent records from the main body of the CLP. Remarkably, the Zr/Rb ratio, a robust geochemical indictor of the winter monsoon, is positively correlated with saturation isothermal remanent magnetization and saturation magnetization during the last glacial, demonstrating the strong control of wind vigor on high‐field magnetization signals dominated by lithogenic ferrimagnetic minerals. In contrast to the variable response of magnetic parameters to regional paleoclimatic fluctuations, the Rb/Sr and Ba/Sr ratios (two summer monsoon indicators) faithfully track weak chemical weathering processes and fine‐scale monsoon oscillations, especially during the last glacial. Additionally, we found that higher proportions of pedogenic high‐coercivity magnetic minerals were formed during the last interglacial, which may reflect relatively low rainfall but higher evapotranspiration in the southern extremity of the HSL compared with the CLP. We therefore attribute this complex magnetic record to a threshold response to the EASM variations in eastern Inner Mongolia.

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