Human-induced asynchronous sedimentary records between the north and south of the Changjiang distal mud belt since 2005 CE

Yang Yang, Min Xu, Jianjun Jia, Jianhua Gao, Yifei Zhao, Liang Zhou, Ya Ping Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Growing evidence has suggested that human activities could cause significant changes in marine sedimentation processes. The spatio-temporal response of sedimentary environment to human activities, however, remains unclear. Here, we present new evidence of sedimentary changes in the East China Sea over the past three decades (i.e., 1984–2016 CE) by using the mean grain size of sensitive components and geochemical parameters (i.e., Si/Ti and Fe/Al) from two sedimentary records from the Zhejiang-Fujian mud belt (ZFMB). Comparison with a compilation of published data shows that natural climate oscillations were the dominant factors that controlled the sedimentation processes before 2005 CE. Variations in the mean grain size of sensitive components over the ZFMB were mainly controlled by the East Asian Winter Monsoon before 2005 CE. The Si/Ti and Fe/Al ratios in the northern and southern of the ZFMB before 2005 CE were controlled by the Pacific Decadal Oscillation/Kuroshio Current and the East Asian Summer Monsoon, respectively. However, our synthesis shows a significant shift in the sedimentation processes between the north and south of the ZFMB since 2005 CE, i.e., after acceleration of the human imprint on sedimentation (e.g., dam construction). The mean grain size of sensitive components and the Si/Ti and Fe/Al records in the north and south of the ZFMB since 2005 CE are mainly controlled by human activities (e.g., human-induced catchment changes in the Changjiang River) and natural climate oscillations (e.g., the East Asian Winter Monsoon and Pacific Decadal Oscillation/Kuroshio Current), respectively. Our study reveals a human-induced asynchronous sedimentary signal in the East China Sea since 2005 CE, and may be applicable to river-dominated marginal seas worldwide during the human-impacted period, providing new evidence to better characterize the Anthropocene epoch.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107578
JournalEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Volume262
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Nov 2021

Keywords

  • Asynchronous response
  • East Asian winter monsoon
  • East China Sea
  • Human activity
  • Sedimentary record

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