Stable isotopes in paleosols and origins of the Asian monsoon


Autoria(s): Quade, Jay; Cerling, Thure E.
Data(s)

1991

Resumo

The stable isotopic composition of buried soil carbonate and organic matter from northern Pakistan and Nepal can be used to reconstruct aspects of the paleoecology of riverine floodplain ecosystems over the past 17 Myr. Probable dry woodland dominated the floodplain biomass of large rivers ancestral to the modern Indus and Ganges up to 7.3 Myr. Between 7.3 and about 6 Myr, tropical grasses gradually displaced woodland and have dominated floodplain biomasses to the present. The paleovegetational transition beginning about 7.3 Myr likely signals the onset of the strongly seasonal precipitation pattern that typifies the monsoonal climate of the region today. One possible analog to the dry woodland soils of the Miocene are found under the Sal woodlands of the northern Indian subcontinent, while undisturbed modern analogs to the Plio-Pleistocene floodplain grasslands can still be found in the Chitwan area of southern Nepal.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/15623/1/Jay%20Quade%20and%20Thure%20E.%20Cerling.pdf

Quade, Jay and Cerling, Thure E. (1991) Stable isotopes in paleosols and origins of the Asian monsoon. In: Seventh Annual Pacific Climate (PACLIM) Workshop , 10-13 April 1990 ,Asilomar Conference Center, Pacific Grove, CA, pp. 229-235.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/15623/

Palavras-Chave #Atmospheric Sciences #Chemistry #Earth Sciences #Ecology
Tipo

Conference or Workshop Item

NonPeerReviewed