Abstract

Peatlands can archive exceptional paleoenvironmental histories of dust delivery because of their uninterrupted and elevated accumulation rates, yet long-term records of dust deposition and its effect on peat accumulation are rare in the arid and semiarid Asian regions that can be major dust sources. We present here high-resolution Holocene peat accumulation and paleodust records from the Tielishahan (TLSH) and Halashazi (HLSZ) peatlands in the Altai Mountains of northwestern China. We find that although the two peatlands share common histories of external climate forcing and dust delivery, they have significantly different long-term rates of peat accumulations. Peat deposition initiated ~2 kyr earlier in the HLSZ peatland than in the TLSH peatland, exhibiting higher peat accumulation rates and greater mineral dust fluxes during the early Holocene, but it has constantly smaller values from the mid-Holocene to the present. The TLSH peatland has a higher peat accumulation rate and mineral dust flux during the early Holocene, lower values during the mid-Holocene, and increasing values during the latest Holocene. The elemental proxies in the two peat cores indicate that atmospheric deposition is the major factor in controlling delivery of mineral elements in HLSZ peatland, whereas elemental delivery in the TLSH peat record is affected by both the regional atmospheric dust flux and the water table under this sequence.We also find that peat accumulation is closely related to mineral dust deposition, as most Asian locations generally share similar patterns in long-term peat accumulation and dust deposition. We postulate that increased aridity in the dust sources of arid central Asia and stronger westerly winds induced by negative NAO variations are key drivers on greater dust deliveries. We further postulate that local factors, such as site-specific differences in permafrost thawing, the areas of the peatlands, and their hydrology are the main reasons for the asynchronous Holocene histories of these two neighboring peatlands. These local factors should be considered when interpreting long-term paleoclimate records from rates of peat accumulation and paleodust delivery.

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