西藏内流区全新世湖泊扩张时空动态变化及驱动机制探讨
编号:1251
稿件编号:544 访问权限:仅限参会人
更新:2021-06-17 09:35:05
浏览:1037次
特邀报告
摘要
The Inner Tibetan Plateau (ITP), the central and western part of the Tibetan Plateau (TP), covers about one-fourth of the entire TP at an average altitude of ~4950 m. There are more than 800 endorheic lakes larger than 1 km2 in the ITP, and many of them are surrounded by conspicuous paleoshorelines indicating much higher past lake levels. During the Holocene lake expansion period, lakes in the western ITP (west of ~86o E) apparently expanded to higher levels than those to the east. In this study, we first identify Holocene lake level (or lake extent) changes over the ITP by combining published lake level variation data with our reconstruction of Dagze Co lake level variations. We then investigate spatial differences in the magnitude of lake expansions and explore the underlying forces driving these differences using the transient climate evolution of the last 21 ka (TraCE-21ka) and Kiel Climate Model (KCM) simulation results. We find that lakes in the ITP expanded to their highest levels during the early Holocene when the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) greatly intensified. After the mid-Holocene, lake levels fell as a result of the weakening of the ISM. The early Holocene northward shift of the westerly jet and a positive phase of the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO) resulted in the intensification of southwesterly winds on the southwest TP flank. Concurrently, westerly winds over the TP weakened, causing a differential increase in water vapor transport to the ITP with higher precipitation levels in the southwestern ITP and lower levels to the northeast.
发表评论