Dynamic control on grain-size distribution of terrigenous sediments in the western South China Sea: Implication for East Asian monsoon evolution

Type Article
Date 2008-05
Language English
Author(s) Chen Guocheng1, Zheng Hongbo1, Li Jianru1, Xie Xin1, Me Xi1
Affiliation(s) 1 : Tongji Univ, State Key Lab Marine Biol, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China.
Source Chinese Science Bulletin (1001-6538) (Science Press), 2008-05 , Vol. 53 , N. 10 , P. 1533-1543
DOI 10.1007/s11434-008-0078-y
WOS© Times Cited 13
Keyword(s) South China Sea, late Quaternary, terrigenous sediments, grain size, East Asian monsoon
Abstract High-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy of Core MD05-2901, which is located off eastern Vietnam in the western South China Sea (SCS), was established and indicated that the core spans a time period of the past 450 ka. Based on the bulk density, fractional porosity and lithogenic content of the sediments, terrigenous mass accumulation rate (TMAR) was obtained, which is 4.9-6.0 g cm(-2) ka(-1) on average during interglacial stages, higher than that during glacial stages, i.e. 1.9-5.0 g cm(-2) ka(-1), which is different from northern and southern SCS which show higher TMAR in glacial stages. By principle component analysis of grain size distribution of all the samples, two main control factors (F1 and F2) were obtained, which are responsible for about 80% variance of granularity. The contents of grain size population 1.26 - 2.66 mu m% and 10.8 - 14.3 mu m% which are sensible to F1 show high-frequency fluctuation, and correlate well with the summer insolation at 15 degrees N. They exhibit a distinct cyclicity with frequencies near 23 ka and 13 ka, in contrast to a strong frequency peak near 100 ka obtained in proxies 4.24-7.42 mu m% and 30.1-43.7 mu m% controlled mainly by F2. The sedimentary character of this part of the SCS was controlled by variations of input flux from two main source areas, namely the southwest and north SCS, which were transported by different circulations of surface current forced by East Asian summer monsoon and winter monsoon respectively. We believe that the East Asian summer monsoon has fluctuated with high frequency and been forced by changes in solar insolation in low latitude associated with precession and half precession, while ice-volume forcing is probably a primary factor in determining the strength and timing of the East Asian winter monsoon but with less important insolation forcing.
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