日本地球惑星科学連合2023年大会

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[E] オンラインポスター発表

セッション記号 U (ユニオン) » ユニオン

[U-03] Advanced understanding of Quaternary and Anthropocene hydroclimate changes in East Asia

2023年5月26日(金) 15:30 〜 17:00 オンラインポスターZoom会場 (1) (オンラインポスター)

コンビーナ:Li Lo(Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University)、横山 祐典(東京大学 大気海洋研究所 )、窪田 薫(海洋研究開発機構海域地震火山部門)、Chuan-Chou Shen(National Taiwan University)

現地ポスター発表開催日時 (2023/5/25 17:15-18:45)

15:30 〜 17:00

[U03-P02] Lake level changes of Lake Olgoy, Mongolia, reconstructed by analyses of paleo shoreline sediments and their IRSL dating.

渋谷 侑磨1Ganbat Shuukhaaz1Udaanjargal Uyangaa1,2、Davasuren Davaadorj2福士 圭介1、*長谷部 徳子1 (1.金沢大学、2.モンゴル国立大学)

キーワード:モンゴル古環境、ルミネッセンス年代測定

Numerous paleo-lake shorelines exist in Mongolia as a record of past severe water level fluctuations. These water level fluctuations were caused by past climatic changes. Mongolia is located at the interface of three climate systems: the Siberian High Pressure, the East Asian Summer Monsoon, and the Westerlies, and the climate varies greatly depending on which climate system dominates.
Lake Olgoy is located in the Valley of Gobi Lakes in southern Mongolia. The lake was formed by tectonic uplift and is known to have experienced significant inflow in the past. When the lake level became high around the middle of Holocene, the flooding through the nearby Galuut Canyon occurred, but the exact time and cause of this flooding event is unknown.
In order to reconstruct lake area reduction process, sediment's geophysical characteristics and major element analysis were carried out on core samples collected from the lake paleo-shorelines. Samples from the higher lake shoreline were dated using infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL Dating) of K-feldspar to determine the age when the lake level was high.
Paleoenvironmental reconstructions confirm that Lake Olgoy underwent a transition from a wet to semi-dry to wet to semi-dry. This is consistent with the results obtained from the sediment core analyses collected from the current Lake Olgoy bottom. The highest water level was reached at approximately 5,000 years ago. This water-level increase event should be associated with the onset of the wet climate due to the northward shift of the East Asian summer monsoon associated with increased solar radiation, thawing of permafrost and melting of glaciers. The high-water level would have caused the flooding, and the water level was dropped rapidly to a level where environmental conditions were suitable for shell fish habitation. The layer in which shell fossils were fould is dated as approximately 3,500 years old