Tectonically Controlled Establishment of Modern‐Like Precipitation Patterns in East and Central Asia During the Early Late Miocene

Author:

Zhang Tao1,Han Wenxia23ORCID,Tian Qian4ORCID,Zhang Jian5ORCID,Kemp David B.6ORCID,Wang Zhixiang2ORCID,Yan Xinting1,Mai Li2,Fang Xiaomin7ORCID,Ogg James8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth Sciences & Key Laboratory of Western China's Mineral Resources of Gansu Province Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

2. Qinghai Provincial Key Laboratory of Geology and Environment of Salt Lake Qinghai Institute of Salt Lake Chinese Academy of Sciences Xining China

3. Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Water and Soil Conservation and Environmental Protection College of Resources and Environment Sciences Linyi University Linyi China

4. Yan'an University Yan'an China

5. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences School of Physics Peking University Beijing China

6. State Key Laboratory for Biogeology and Environmental Geology and Hubei Key Laboratory of Critical Zone Evolution School of Earth Sciences China University of Geosciences (Wuhan) Wuhan China

7. State Key Laboratory of Tibetan Plateau Earth System Science Resources and Environment (LTPESRE) & Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

8. Key Laboratory of Deep‐time Geography and Environment Reconstruction and Applications MNR & Institute of Sedimentary Geology Chengdu University of Technology Chengdu China

Abstract

AbstractDeciphering how modern precipitation patterns became established in monsoon‐dominated East Asia and the arid interior Asia is crucial for predicting future precipitation trends under accelerated global warming and increased climate extremes. However, this effort is hindered by a scarcity of quantitative paleo‐precipitation data in this region. Here we reconstruct the pattern of Middle to Late Miocene paleo‐precipitation across an east‐to‐west transect from the summer monsoon‐dominated East Asian region through the transition zone and into interior Asia. Our work is based on a newly established precipitation calculation equation and quantitative pollen‐based precipitation conversion. Analysis indicates a common trend of precipitation across the studied region prior to ca, 11 Ma, followed by a clear divergence of precipitation variations between East and interior Asia since at least 11–9 Ma. This divergence is characterized by increasing precipitation in East Asia, but a coeval decrease in rainfall in the transition zone and interior Asia. The timing of this precipitation divergence was contemporaneous with intense tectonic activity in the northern Tibetan Plateau, which differentially affected the efficacy of water vapor transport into East and interior Asia. Modeling work using different topographic settings corroborates this tectonic influence. Our study demonstrates the early establishment of modern‐like precipitation patterns in East‐interior Asia at least in the early Late Miocene.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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