The uplift of eastern Tibet,Asian monsoon development and the evolution of globally significant Asian biodiversity are all linked,but in obscure ways.Sedimentology,geochronology,clumped isotope thermometry,and fossil ...The uplift of eastern Tibet,Asian monsoon development and the evolution of globally significant Asian biodiversity are all linked,but in obscure ways.Sedimentology,geochronology,clumped isotope thermometry,and fossil leaf-derived numerical climate data from the Relu Basin,eastern Tibet,show at~50–45 Ma the basin was a hot(mean annual air temperature,MAAT,~27℃)dry desert at a low-elevation of 0.6±0.6 km.Rapid basin rise to 2.0±0.9 km at 45–42 Ma and to 2.9±0.9 km at 42–40 Ma,with MAATs of~20 and~16℃,respectively,accompanied seasonally varying increased annual precipitation to>1500 mm.From~39 to 34 Ma,the basin attained 3.5±1.0 km,near its present-day elevation(~3.7 km),and MAAT cooled to~6℃.Numerically-modelled Asian monsoon strength increased significantly when this Eocene uplift of eastern Tibet was incorporated.The simulation/proxy congruence points to a distinctive Eocene Asian monsoon,quite unlike that seen today,in that it featured bimodal precipitation and a winter-wet regime,and this enhanced biodiversity modernisation across eastern Asia.The Paleogene biodiversity of Asia evolved under a continually modifying monsoon influence,with the modern Asian monsoon system being unique to the present and a product of a long gradual development in the context of an ever-changing Earth system.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China Basic Science Center for Tibetan Plateau Earth System(41988101)the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research Program(2019QZKK0708)+2 种基金the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(XDA20070301)the National Natural Science Foundation of China-Natural Environment Research Council of the United Kingdom Joint Research Program(41661134049 and NE/P013805/1)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(41941016)。
文摘The uplift of eastern Tibet,Asian monsoon development and the evolution of globally significant Asian biodiversity are all linked,but in obscure ways.Sedimentology,geochronology,clumped isotope thermometry,and fossil leaf-derived numerical climate data from the Relu Basin,eastern Tibet,show at~50–45 Ma the basin was a hot(mean annual air temperature,MAAT,~27℃)dry desert at a low-elevation of 0.6±0.6 km.Rapid basin rise to 2.0±0.9 km at 45–42 Ma and to 2.9±0.9 km at 42–40 Ma,with MAATs of~20 and~16℃,respectively,accompanied seasonally varying increased annual precipitation to>1500 mm.From~39 to 34 Ma,the basin attained 3.5±1.0 km,near its present-day elevation(~3.7 km),and MAAT cooled to~6℃.Numerically-modelled Asian monsoon strength increased significantly when this Eocene uplift of eastern Tibet was incorporated.The simulation/proxy congruence points to a distinctive Eocene Asian monsoon,quite unlike that seen today,in that it featured bimodal precipitation and a winter-wet regime,and this enhanced biodiversity modernisation across eastern Asia.The Paleogene biodiversity of Asia evolved under a continually modifying monsoon influence,with the modern Asian monsoon system being unique to the present and a product of a long gradual development in the context of an ever-changing Earth system.