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The Sihailongwan Maar Lake, northeastern China as a candidate Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point for the Anthropocene Series

Authors :
Yongming Han
An Zhisheng
Dewen Lei
Weijian Zhou
Luyuan Zhang
Xue Zhao
Dongna Yan
Richard Arimoto
Neil L Rose
Sarah L Roberts
Li Li
Yalan Tang
Xingqi Liu
Xuewu Fu
Tobias Schneider
Xiaolin Hou
Jianghu Lan
Liangcheng Tan
Xingxing Liu
Jing Hu
Yunning Cao
Weiguo Liu
Feng Wu
Tianli Wang
Xiaoke Qiang
Ning Chen
Peng Cheng
Yifei Hao
Qiyuan Wang
Guoqiang Chu
Meiling Guo
Mei Han
Zhihai Tan
Chong Wei
Ulrike Dusek
Isotope Research
Source :
Anthropocene Review, 10(1), 177-200
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Sihailongwan Maar Lake, located in Northeast China, is a candidate Global boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) for demarcation of the Anthropocene. The lake’s varved sediments are formed by alternating allogenic atmospheric inputs and authigenic lake processes and store a record of environmental and human impacts at a continental-global scale. Varve counting and radiometric dating provided a precise annual-resolution sediment chronology for the site. Time series records of radioactive (239,240Pu, 129I and soot 14C), chemical (spheroidal carbonaceous particles, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, soot, heavy metals, δ13C, etc.), physical (magnetic susceptibility and grayscale) and biological (environmental DNA) indicators all show rapid changes in the mid-20th century, coincident with clear lithological changes of the sediments. Statistical analyses of these proxies show a tipping point in 1954 CE. 239,240Pu activities follow a typical unimodal globally-distributed profile, and are proposed as the primary marker for the Anthropocene. A rapid increase in 239,240Pu activities at 88 mm depth in core SHLW21-Fr-13 (1953 CE) is synchronous with rapid changes of other anthropogenic proxies and the Great Acceleration, marking the onset of the Anthropocene. The results indicate that Sihailongwan Maar Lake is an ideal site for the Anthropocene GSSP.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2053020X and 20530196
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anthropocene Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....535fe4ea056fce496ca6ac0a821fab24
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/20530196231167019