High‐Resolution, Multiproxy Speleothem Record of the 8.2 ka Event From Mainland Southeast Asia

Author:

Wood Christopher T.12ORCID,Johnson Kathleen R.1ORCID,Lewis Lindsey. E.1,Wright Kevin1ORCID,Wang Jessica K.1ORCID,Borsato Andrea3ORCID,Griffiths Michael L.4ORCID,Mason Andrew5,Henderson Gideon M.5,Setera Jacob B.67ORCID,Frisia Silvia3ORCID,Keophanhya Sengphone8,White Joyce C.910

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth System Science University of California Irvine CA USA

2. National Isotope Centre GNS Science/Te Pū Ao Lower Hutt New Zealand

3. School of Environmental and Life Sciences University of Newcastle NSW Australia

4. Department of Environmental Science William Paterson University Wayne NJ USA

5. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

6. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Rutgers University Piscataway NJ USA

7. Now at CASSMAR University of Texas at El Paso—Jacobs JETS II Contract NASA Johnson Space Center Houston TX USA

8. Cultural Section Department of Information, Culture and Tourism Luang Prabang LA

9. Institute for Southeast Asian Archaeology Philadelphia PA USA

10. Department of Anthropology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA USA

Abstract

AbstractThe 8.2 ka event is the most significant global climate anomaly of the Holocene epoch, but a lack of records from Mainland Southeast Asia (MSEA) currently limits our understanding of the spatial and temporal extent of the climate response. A newly developed speleothem record from Tham Doun Mai Cave, Northern Laos provides the first high‐resolution record of this event in MSEA. Our multiproxy record (δ18O, δ13C, Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, and petrographic data), anchored in time by 9 U‐Th ages, reveals a significant reduction in local rainfall amount and weakening of the monsoon at the event onset at ∼8.29 ± 0.03 ka BP. This response lasts for a minimum of ∼170 years, similar to event length estimates from other speleothem δ18O monsoon records. Interestingly, however, our δ13C and Mg/Ca data, proxies for local hydrology, show that abrupt changes to local rainfall amounts began decades earlier (∼70 years) than registered in the δ18O. Moreover, the δ13C and Mg/Ca also show that reductions in rainfall continued for at least ∼200 years longer than the weakening of the monsoon inferred from the δ18O. Our interpretations suggest that drier conditions brought on by the 8.2 ka event in MSEA were felt beyond the temporal boundaries defined by δ18O‐inferred monsoon intensity, and an initial wet period (or precursor event) may have preceded the local drying. Most existing Asian Monsoon proxy records of the 8.2 ka event may lack the resolution and/or multiproxy information necessary to establish local and regional hydrological sensitivity to abrupt climate change.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Henry Luce Foundation

University of Pennsylvania

William Paterson University of New Jersey

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Paleontology,Atmospheric Science,Oceanography

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