Tectonic and orbital forcing of the South Asian monsoon in central Tibet during the late Oligocene

Author:

Jin Chun-Sheng12ORCID,Xu Deke12ORCID,Li Mingsong3ORCID,Hu Pengxiang4,Jiang Zhaoxia5,Liu Jianxing6,Miao Yunfa7ORCID,Wu Fuli8ORCID,Liang Wentian9,Zhang Qiang1,Su Bai1,Liu Qingsong10,Zhang Ran11ORCID,Sun Jimin12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Cenozoic Geology and Environment, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China

2. Innovation Academy for Earth Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China

3. School of Earth and Space Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China

4. Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia

5. College of Marine Geosciences, Ocean University of China, Qingdao 266100, China

6. Key Laboratory of Marine Sedimentology and Environmental Geology, First Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, Qingdao 266061, China

7. Key Laboratory of Desert and Desertification, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China

8. Key Laboratory of Continental Collision and Plateau uplift, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China

9. State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Northwest University, Xi’an 710069, China

10. Department of Ocean Science and Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen 518055, China

11. Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China

Abstract

The modern pattern of the Asian monsoon is thought to have formed around the Oligocene/Miocene transition and is generally attributed to Himalaya–Tibetan Plateau (H–TP) uplift. However, the timing of the ancient Asian monsoon over the TP and its response to astronomical forcing and TP uplift remains poorly known because of the paucity of well-dated high-resolution geological records from the TP interior. Here, we present a precession-scale cyclostratigraphic sedimentary section of 27.32 to 23.24 million years ago (Ma) during the late Oligocene epoch from the Nima Basin to show that the South Asian monsoon (SAM) had already advanced to the central TP (32°N) at least by 27.3 Ma, which is indicated by cyclic arid–humid fluctuations based on environmental magnetism proxies. A shift of lithology and astronomically orbital periods and amplified amplitude of proxy measurements as well as a hydroclimate transition around 25.8 Ma suggest that the SAM intensified at ~25.8 Ma and that the TP reached a paleoelevation threshold for enhancing the coupling between the uplifted plateau and the SAM. Orbital short eccentricity-paced precipitation variability is argued to be mainly driven by orbital eccentricity-modulated low-latitude summer insolation rather than glacial-interglacial Antarctic ice sheet fluctuations. The monsoon data from the TP interior provide key evidence to link the greatly enhanced tropical SAM at 25.8 Ma with TP uplift rather than global climate change and suggest that SAM’s northward expansion to the boreal subtropics was dominated by a combination of tectonic and astronomical forcing at multiple timescales in the late Oligocene epoch.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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