10.1594/PANGAEA.712911
Zhang, Yi Ge
Yi Ge
Zhang
0000-0001-7331-1246
Ji, Jungfeng
Jungfeng
Ji
Balsam, William L
William L
Balsam
Liu, Lianwen
Lianwen
Liu
Chen, Jun
Jun
Chen
0000-0003-3291-5400
High resolution color reflectance and hematite and goethite record of ODP Hole 184-1143A in the South China Sea
PANGAEA
2009
Drilling/drill rig
Leg184
Joides Resolution
Ocean Drilling Program (ODP)
1999-03-03T16:00:00/1999-03-06T23:45:00
en
Supplementary Publication Series of Datasets
10.1016/j.epsl.2007.09.022
2 datasets
application/zip
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
Precipitation has a larger variability than temperature in tropical monsoon regions, thus it is an important climate variable. However, reconstructions of long-term rainfall histories are scarce because of the lack of reliable proxies. Here we document that iron oxide minerals, specifically the ratio of hematite to goethite (Hm/Gt), is a reasonable precipitation proxy. Using diffuse reflectance spectrophotometry, we measured samples from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) 1143 drilling site (9°21.72'N, 113°17.11'E, 2777 m water depth) for hematite and goethite, whose formation processes are favored by opposing climate conditions. In order to determine the content of hematite and goethite we produced a set of calibration samples by removing the iron oxides to generate the natural matrix to which hematite and goethite in known percentages were added. From these calibration samples we developed a transfer function for determining hematite and goethite concentration from a sample's spectral reflectance. Applying this method to ODP 1143 sediments (top 34 m of a 510 m core with sampling interval of 10 cm) we were able to reconstruct a continuous precipitation history for SE Asia of the past 600 kyr using the Hm/Gt ratio as a proxy of the precipitation variability of Asian monsoon. The reliability of this Hm/Gt proxy is corroborated by its consistency with the stalagmite delta18O data from South China. Comparing long-term Hm/Gt records with the surface temperature gradient of equatorial Pacific Ocean, we found that monsoon precipitation and El Niño are correlated for the last 600 kyr. The development of El Niño-like conditions decreased SE Asia precipitation, whereas precipitation increases in response to La Niña intensification
Supplement to: Zhang, Yi Ge; Ji, Jungfeng; Liu, Lianwen; Chen, Jun (2007): High resolution hematite and goethite records from ODP 1143, South China Sea: Co-evolution of monsoonal precipitation and El Niño over the past 600,000 years. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 264(1-2), 136-150
113.28503
9.36198
South China Sea