Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1041622 Quaternary International 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Phosphorus (P) provides an important biologically limiting nutrient in lake ecosystems, and its concentrations furnish significant information on lake nutrient status, climatic change, and landscape development within a drainage area. This study explores the potential of calcium-bound P and iron-bound P in calcareous lacustrine sediments to reveal variations of the paleolake nutrient status and its related climatic changes. Data come from the nearly 1000-m long core (SG-1) from the western Qaidam Basin (NE Tibetan Plateau), which has been well-dated by paleomagnetism to between 2.77 and 0.1 Ma. Calcium-bound P and iron-bound P make up the two most frequent phases of inorganic phosphorus pools in the calcareous sediment. This study compares the variations of calcium-bound P and iron-bound P with the independent proxy for biologic production proxy Total Organic Carbon (TOC) as well as a climatic proxy for lake level fluctuation from the borehole. Those results indicate that calcium-bound P responds sensitively to paleolake nutrients and climatic changes, while the iron-bound P responds to more complex factors, more specific, to the content of iron oxides. Variations of the calcium-bound P in the core SG-1 show a long-term, stepwise decrease, with shifts at ∼2.5 Ma, 1.8 Ma, 1.2 Ma, and 0.6 Ma, indicating a long-term stepwise decrease of the paleolake nutrient supply in the drainage. This suggests that the ecologic systems experienced a long-term deterioration, and the climate in central Asia became increasingly arid since after the late Pliocene.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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