Abstract

Loess deposits as a unique terrestrial archive of paleo-dust contribute to understanding the wide-scale and long-term dust transport from source to sink. This study provided diagnostic constraints on the sources of clay-sized particles in the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP) loess by expanding the potential dust source areas with the Kyzylkum Desert and the Central Asian loess. Based on the grain sizes and the particle-size-specific trace elements, we characterized the major provenance and the sedimentary process of the Kyzylkum Desert sands. The results indicate the main derivation of Kyzylkum Desert sands from the Tian Shan-derived sediments, with limited large-scale mixing. The desert was thought to be a sink region, instead of an important dust source, which was supported by its weak genetic links to the Central Asian loess. With integration of the published data set about trace element and SrNd isotopic composition and our results, combined with the simulation results, we revealed that the Badain Jaran and Tengger deserts in northwestern CLP, rather than the Taklimakan and Kyzylkum deserts further west, played an important role in supply of the clay-sized particles for the CLP loess. The findings implied that the fine particles were primarily related to the East Asian winter monsoon, instead of the high-level westerly airstreams. In this context, we attributed the asynchronous timing of enhanced dust accumulation during the last glacial maximum (LGM) over Greenland and North Pacific (early LGM) and on the CLP (late LGM) to the differences in the major dust sources and in the atmospheric circulation systems.

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