4 results on '"Gu, Yansheng"'
Search Results
2. A study of clay pore water and sporopollens for characterizing paleoenvironments in the Hebei Plain, Northern China.
- Author
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Niu, Hong, Liang, Xing, Lu, Guoping, Peng, Fei, Jin, Menggui, and Gu, Yansheng
- Subjects
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CLAY , *PORE water , *OXYGEN isotopes , *SEDIMENTS , *BOREHOLE mining , *METEOROLOGICAL precipitation - Abstract
We developed a clay pore water (CPW) isotopic method for tracing paleoenvironments characterized by sporopollens. The thick clayey layers have the advantage of preserving pore water regardless of whether the water is inherent in the clayey layers or not. Therefore, the clayey layers are a suitable target from which paleoenvironmental information can be extracted. Sediment sporopollens as well as CPW deuterium and oxygen isotopes were investigated in drilling cores obtained from a 130-m borehole at a field site in Hengshui in the North China Plain. Our interpretation of δ 18 O in CPW was consistent with sporopollens climate indices, indicating that CPW was an effective proxy for obtaining paleoenvironmental information. Sporopollens species were abundant in the cores, but the quantity of each species was low. Furthermore, mean annual temperature and precipitation curves were established using a pollen–climatic response surface model. The results indicated two warm-humid periods (5.2–0 m, 22.6–11 m) and one cold-dry period (8.8–6.4 m) in the Holocene as well as two warm-humid periods (90.6–83 m, 110.6–108.2 m) and three cold-dry periods (approximately 40 m, 66.4–56.8 m, approximately 100 m) in the Late Pleistocene. Data derived from the sporopollens and CPW cumulatively elucidate the environmental change in Northern China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Geochemical constraints on provenance of the mid-Pleistocene red earth sediments in subtropical China.
- Author
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Hong, Hanlie, Wang, Chaowen, Zeng, Kefeng, Gu, Yansheng, Wu, Yuanbao, Yin, Ke, and Li, Zhaohui
- Subjects
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GEOCHEMISTRY , *PROVENANCE (Geology) , *PLEISTOCENE Epoch , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Abstract: The source of mid-Pleistocene red earth sediments in the middle to lower reaches of the Yangtze (Changjiang) River was investigated based on their geochemical characteristics. The Xuancheng and Jiujiang red earth sediments have similar major and trace element distribution patterns. Compared to the loess and paleosol deposits of the Chinese Loess Plateau, the upper continental crust (UCC), and the post-Archean Australian average shale (PAAS), the sediments display notable depletion of CaO, MgO, Na2O, and accumulation of TiO2, Al2O3, and Fe2O3(t). The trace element distribution patterns of the red earth sediments are also different from those of loess and the PAAS, but are similar to those of the loess deposits, except for lower values of mobile trace elements Sr, Ba, and Ni, and higher values of Zr and Y. The red earth samples have uniform La/Th ratios of ~2.8, compatible with those of the UCC, loess, and paleosol. They also have similar chondrite-normalized REE patterns, characterized by enriched LREE and relatively flat HREE profiles, and consistent negative Eu anomalies, similar to those of the UCC, the loess and paleosol, and the Yangtze deposits. These results suggest that the red earth sediments have been subject to considerable mixing prior to deposition and strong subsequent chemical weathering. The sediments have very uniform 143Nd/144Nd and 147Sm/144Nd ratios, this points to well-mixed and multi-recycled sediments. The 143Nd/144Nd and 87Sr/86Sr values of the red earth sediments match well with those of the deposits in the middle to lower reaches of the Yangtze River, but are different from those of the loess and paleosols. This suggests that the red earth sediments are derived from the drainage basins of the middle to lower Yangtze River and might have experienced more intense chemical weathering relative to the Yangtze deposits, as reflected by their higher Rb/Sr ratios, intense depletion of mobile elements and accumulation of immobile elements, as well as their well-developed net-like structure. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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4. River flooding response to ENSO-related monsoon precipitation: Evidence from late Holocene core sediments in the Jianghan Plain.
- Author
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Guan, Shuo, Yang, Qian, Li, Yuenan, Liu, Hongye, and Gu, Yansheng
- Subjects
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MONSOONS , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *PLAINS , *SEDIMENTS ,EL Nino ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection planning - Abstract
In the Jianghan Plain, known as the province of thousands of lakes, monsoon precipitation-induced floods carrying large amounts of sediments can shape the depositional landscape, particularly after frequent river flooding. Therefore, the sediments document abundant information on climate change and its interaction with the fluviolacustrine system and paleoflooding. To date, late Holocene paleoflood records are limited, as continuous paleoflood archives are scarce. Here, using grain size end-members and sensitive components in combination with element records from the JH001 sediment core in the Jianghan Plain, nine continuous paleoflood regimes were identified during 3400–3000, 2750–2550, 2050–1820, 1800–1650, 1550–1500, 1350–1100, 1050–1000, 800–750, and 620–600 cal yr BP, respectively. Exploration of the climatic driving factors on flood regimes indicated a good agreement among paleoflood regimes and El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-related hydrological records in the Middle Yangtze Valley (MYV) and reconstructed ENSO records. This suggests that ENSO is the dominant influence on flood occurrence in the Jianghan Plain. Strong ENSO activity exerted a southward shift in the subtropical high in the western Pacific and produced a long-lasting rainbelt in the mid-lower Yangtze Valley, which induced the occurrence of floods in the Jianghan Plain. The evolution pattern of sedimentary environment demonstrated that the floods led to river overflow and overbank expansion, even causing the rivers to divert and bifurcate. The overflow channels carried and deposited silt sediments in the floodplain, which shaped the specific alluvial-lacustrine landscape of the Jianghan Plain. Our results indicate that the grain size of core sediments is sensitive to the occurrence of paleofloods, and that ENSO-related paleofloods significantly influenced the fluviolacustrine sedimentary evolution. These findings are highly useful for regional flood planning and environmental protection in the eastern Jianghan Plain in the context of global warming. • Grain size end-member fractions were sensitive to paleoflood events. • Successive paleoflood records of the Jianghan Plain over the past 4000 cal yr BP were obtained. • The paleoflood events in Jianghan Plain were regulated by ENSO activities. • ENSO-related paleofloods dominated the fluviolacustrine sedimentary evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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