The climatic and hydrological changes and environmental responses recorded in lake sediments of Xinjiang, China

Based on the analyses of environmental proxy data in lake sediments and instrumental records of Xinjiang in northwest China, the Holocene climate and hydrological variability and its environmental re- sponses were studied in different time scales and regions. The results showed that the Holocene climate variability had obvious differences between the north and south of Xinjiang. In northern Xinjiang, the Holocene climate was dry in the early period, humid in the middle period, and then changed to dry in the late period. However, the climate transition times were not consistent in different regions. In southern Xin- jiang, although there were many different types of climate change patterns inferred from different catch- ments, the warm and wet climate was recorded in most lake sediments in the middle Holocene. According to comparisons of some millennium scale records in lake sediments, the climate was warm and dry in the past 100 years. It can be concluded the climate showed a trend of aridity in Holocene. Especially in recent 50 years, the lake area has been shrinking rapidly because of the population growth and social economic development, which brings some environmental problems. Lake level and area changes were sensitively affected by the climate variation in geological history of Xinjiang and the lake level will continue to shrink because of the drought climate and strengthened human activities.

[1]  Zhang Chengjun The Palaeoenvironmental Variation from the High-Resolution Record of the Holocene Sediment Carbonate and Isotopic Composition in Bosten Lake and Responding to Glacial Activity , 2007 .

[2]  E. Haworth,et al.  Lake Sediments and Environmental History. , 1985 .

[3]  Marios Sophocleous,et al.  Methodology and application of combined watershed and ground-water models in Kansas , 2000 .

[4]  LI Zong-yao,et al.  Quantitative Analysis of the Impact of Irrigation Water from Kaidu River on the Area Change of Bosten Lake , 2005 .

[5]  J. K. Koelliker,et al.  Integrated numerical modeling for basin-wide water management: The case of the Rattlesnake Creek basin in south-central Kansas , 1999 .

[6]  Yong-hui Yao,et al.  Tectonic geomorphological characteristics for evolution of the Manas Lake , 2010 .

[7]  Y. Xiangdong,et al.  Characteristics of an early Holocene climate and environment from lake sediments in Ebinur region, NW China , 2005 .

[8]  L. Jijun Patterns of environmental changes since the late Pleistocene in Northwestern China , 1991 .

[9]  LI Gui-jian Paleoclimate of Lop Nur and the response to global change by geochemical elements multi-analysis , 2008 .

[10]  E. Zhang,et al.  A high-resolution climatic change since Holocene inferred from multi-proxy of lake sediment in westerly area of China , 2007 .

[11]  Li Huiguo,et al.  Changes of Manas lake in the past 50 years in Xinjiang province , 2007 .

[12]  Raghavan Srinivasan,et al.  A GIS-BASED REGIONAL PLANNING TOOL FOR IRRIGATION DEMAND ASSESSMENT AND SAVINGS USING SWAT , 2005 .

[13]  Chenghu Zhou,et al.  The oasis expansion and eco-environment change over the last 50 years in Manas River Valley, Xinjiang , 2006 .

[14]  James W. Jones,et al.  The DSSAT cropping system model , 2003 .

[15]  Fahu Chen,et al.  Humid Little Ice Age in arid central Asia documented by Bosten Lake, Xinjiang, China , 2006 .

[16]  Dongwei Liu,et al.  Saline dust storms and their ecological impacts in arid regions , 2010 .

[17]  Li Shude,et al.  Holocene Yellow Silt Layers and the Paleoclimate Event of 8200 a B.P. in Lop Nur, Xinjiang, NW China , 2003 .

[18]  Zhou Cheng Environmental change in Bosten Lake and its relation with the oasis reclamation in Yanqi Basin , 2001 .

[19]  Ning-lian Wang,et al.  Possible solar forcing of 400-year wet–dry climate cycles in northwestern China , 2009 .

[20]  D. Engstrom,et al.  Chemical stratigraphy of lake sediments as a record of environmental change , 1984 .

[21]  F. Gasse,et al.  A Late Pleistocene-Holocene lacustrine record from Lake Manas, Zunggar (northern Xinjiang, western China) , 1996 .

[22]  S. Stanley The past climate change heats up. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.