1 resultado para Asia Pacific studies
em Publishing Network for Geoscientific
Resumo:
The record of eolian deposition on the Ontong Java Plateau (OJP) since the Oligocene (approximately 33 Ma) has been investigated using dust grain size, dust flux, and dust mineralogy, with the goal of interpreting the paleoclimatology and paleometeorology of the western equatorial Pacific. Studies of modern dust dispersal in the Pacific have indicated that the equatorial regions receive contributions from both the Northern Hemisphere westerly winds and the equatorial easterlies; limited meteorological data suggest that low-altitude westerlies could also transport dust to OJP from proximal sources in the western Pacific. Previous studies have established the characteristics of the grain-size, flux, and mineralogy records of dust deposited in the North Pacific by the mid-latitude westerlies and in the eastern equatorial Pacific by the low-latitude easterlies since the Oligocene. By comparing the OJP records with the well-defined records of the mid-latitude westerlies and the low-latitude easterlies, the importance of multiple sources of dust to OJP can be recognized. OJP dust is composed of quartz, illite, kaolinite/chlorite, plagioclase feldspar, smectite, and heulandite. Mineral abundance profiles and principal components analysis (PCA) of the mineral abundance data have been used to identify assemblages of minerals that covary through all or part of the OJP record. Abundances of quartz, illite, and kaolinite/chlorite covary throughout the interval studied, defining a mineralogical assemblage supplied from Asia. Some plagioclase and smectite were also supplied as part of this assemblage during the late Miocene and Pliocene/Pleistocene, but other source areas have supplied significant amounts of plagioclase, smectite, and heulandite to OJP since the Oligocene. OJP dust is generally coarser than dust deposited by the Northern Hemisphere westerlies or the equatorial easterlies, and it accumulates more rapidly by 1-2 orders of magnitude. These relationships indicate the importance of the local sources on dust deposition at OJP. The grain-size and flux records of OJP dust do not exhibit most of the events observed in the corresponding records of the Northern Hemisphere westerlies or the equatorial easterlies, because these features are masked by the mixing of dust from several sources at OJP. The abundance record of the Asian dust assemblage at OJP, however, does contain most of the features characteristic of dust flux by means of the Northern Hemisphere westerlies, indicating that the paleoclimatic and paleometeorologic signal of a particular source area and wind system can be preserved in areas well beyond the region dominated by that source and those winds. Identifying such a signal requires "unmixing" the various dust assemblages, which can be accomplished by combining grain-size, flux, and mineralogic data.