TY - JOUR A1 - Jia, Weihan A1 - Anslan, Sten A1 - Chen, Fahu A1 - Cao, Xianyong A1 - Dong, Hailiang A1 - Dulias, Katharina A1 - Gu, Zhengquan A1 - Heinecke, Liv A1 - Jiang, Hongchen A1 - Kruse, Stefan A1 - Kang, Wengang A1 - Li, Kai A1 - Liu, Sisi A1 - Liu, Xingqi A1 - Liu, Ying A1 - Ni, Jian A1 - Schwalb, Antje A1 - Stoof-Leichsenring, Kathleen R. A1 - Shen, Wei A1 - Tian, Fang A1 - Wang, Jing A1 - Wang, Yongbo A1 - Wang, Yucheng A1 - Xu, Hai A1 - Yang, Xiaoyan A1 - Zhang, Dongju A1 - Herzschuh, Ulrike T1 - Sedimentary ancient DNA reveals past ecosystem and biodiversity changes on the Tibetan Plateau: overview and prospects JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - Alpine ecosystems on the Tibetan Plateau are being threatened by ongoing climate warming and intensified human activities. Ecological time-series obtained from sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) are essential for understanding past ecosystem and biodiversity dynamics on the Tibetan Plateau and their responses to climate change at a high taxonomic resolution. Hitherto only few but promising studies have been published on this topic. The potential and limitations of using sedaDNA on the Tibetan Plateau are not fully understood. Here, we (i) provide updated knowledge of and a brief introduction to the suitable archives, region-specific taphonomy, state-of-the-art methodologies, and research questions of sedaDNA on the Tibetan Plateau; (ii) review published and ongoing sedaDNA studies from the Tibetan Plateau; and (iii) give some recommendations for future sedaDNA study designs. Based on the current knowledge of taphonomy, we infer that deep glacial lakes with freshwater and high clay sediment input, such as those from the southern and southeastern Tibetan Plateau, may have a high potential for sedaDNA studies. Metabarcoding (for microorganisms and plants), metagenomics (for ecosystems), and hybridization capture (for prehistoric humans) are three primary sedaDNA approaches which have been successfully applied on the Tibetan Plateau, but their power is still limited by several technical issues, such as PCR bias and incompleteness of taxonomic reference databases. Setting up high-quality and open-access regional taxonomic reference databases for the Tibetan Plateau should be given priority in the future. To conclude, the archival, taphonomic, and methodological conditions of the Tibetan Plateau are favorable for performing sedaDNA studies. More research should be encouraged to address questions about long-term ecological dynamics at ecosystem scale and to bring the paleoecology of the Tibetan Plateau into a new era. KW - Sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) KW - Tibetan Plateau KW - Environmental DNA KW - Taphonomy KW - Ecosystem KW - Biodiversity KW - Paleoecology KW - Paleogeography Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2022.107703 SN - 0277-3791 SN - 1873-457X VL - 293 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Panek, Tomas A1 - Korup, Oliver A1 - Lenart, Jan A1 - Hradecky, Jan A1 - Brezny, Michal T1 - Giant landslides in the foreland of the Patagonian Ice Sheet JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - Quaternary glaciations have repeatedly shaped large tracts of the Andean foreland. Its spectacular large glacial lakes, staircases of moraine ridges, and extensive outwash plains have inspired generations of scientists to reconstruct the processes, magnitude, and timing of ice build-up and decay at the mountain front. Surprisingly few of these studies noticed many dozens of giant (≥108 m3) mass-wasting deposits in the foreland. We report some of the world's largest terrestrial landslides in the eastern piedmont of the Patagonian Ice Sheet (PIS) along the traces of the former Lago Buenos Aires and Lago Puyerredón glacier lobes and lakes. More than 283 large rotational slides and lateral spreads followed by debris slides, earthflows, rotational and translational rockslides, complex slides and few large rock avalanches detached some 164 ± 56 km3 of material from the slopes of volcanic mesetas, lake-bounding moraines, and river-gorge walls. Many of these landslide deposits intersect with well-dated moraine ridges or former glacial-lake shorelines, and offer opportunities for relative dating of slope failure. We estimate that >60% of the landslide volume (∼96 km3) detached after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Giant slope failures cross-cutting shorelines of a large Late Glacial to Early Holocene lake (“glacial lake PIS”) likely occurred during successive lake-level drop between ∼11.5 and 8 ka, and some of them are the largest hitherto documented landslides in moraines. We conclude that 1) large portions of terminal moraines can fail catastrophically several thousand years after emplacement; 2) slopes formed by weak bedrock or unconsolidated glacial deposits bordering glacial lakes can release extremely large landslides; and 3) landslides still occur in the piedmont, particularly along postglacial gorges cut in response to falling lake levels. KW - Quaternary KW - Landslide KW - Geomorphology KW - Relative dating KW - Glacier foreland KW - Glacial lake KW - Patagonian Ice Sheet KW - Paleogeography KW - South America Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.06.028 SN - 0277-3791 VL - 194 SP - 39 EP - 54 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - THES A1 - Kaya, Mustafa T1 - Cretaceous-Paleogene evolution of the proto-Paratethys Sea in Central Asia BT - mechanisms and paleoenvironmental impacts BT - Mechanismen und paläoökologische Auswirkungen N2 - Unlike today’s prevailing terrestrial features, the geologic past of Central Asia witnessed marine environments and conditions as well. A vast, shallow sea, known as proto-Paratethys, extended across Eurasia from the Mediterranean Tethys to the Tarim Basin in western China during Cretaceous to Paleogene times. This sea formed about 160 million years ago (during Jurassic times) when the waters of the Tethys Ocean flooded into Eurasia. It drastically retreated to the west and became isolated as the Paratethys during the Late Eocene-Oligocene (ca. 34 Ma). Having well-constrained timing and paleogeography for the Cretaceous-Paleogene proto-Paratethys sea incursions in Central Asia is essential to properly understand and distinguish the controlling mechanisms and their link to Asian paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic change. The Cretaceous-Paleogene tectonic evolution of the Pamir and Tibet and their far-field effects play a significant role on the sedimentological and structural evolution of the Central Asian basins and on the evolution of the proto-Paratethys sea fluctuations as well. Comparing the records of the sea incursions to the tectonic and eustatic events has paramount importance to reveal the controlling mechanisms behind the sea incursions. However, due to inaccuracies in the dating of rocks (mostly continental rocks and marine rocks with benthic microfossils providing low-resolution biostratigraphic constraints) and conflicting results, there has been no consensus on the timing of the sea incursions and interpretation of their records has been in question. Here, we present a new chronostratigraphic framework based on biostratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy as well as a detailed paleoenvironmental analysis for the Cretaceous and Paleogene proto-Paratethys Sea incursions in the Tajik and Tarim basins, in Central Asia. This enables us to identify the major drivers of marine fluctuations and their potential consequences on regional and global climate, particularly Asian aridification and the global carbon cycle perturbations such as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). To estimate the paleogeographic evolution of the proto-Paratethys Sea, the refined age constraints and detailed paleoenvironmental interpretations are combined with successive paleogeographic maps. Regional coastlines and depositional environments during the Cretaceous-Paleogene sea advances and retreats were drawn based on the results of this thesis and integrated with existing literature to generate new paleogeographic maps. Before its final westward retreat in the Eocene, a total of six Cretaceous and Paleogene major sea incursions have been distinguished from the sedimentary records of the Tajik and Tarim basins in Central Asia. All have been studied and documented here. We identify the presence of marine conditions already in the Early Cretaceous in the western Tajik Basin, followed by the Cenomanian (ca. 100 Ma) and Santonian (ca. 86 Ma) major marine incursions far into the eastern Tajik and Tarim basins separated by a Turonian-Coniacian (ca. 92-86 Ma) regression. Basin-wide tectonic subsidence analyses imply that the Early Cretaceous invasion of the sea into the Tajik Basin is related to increased Pamir tectonism (at ca. 130 – 90 Ma) in a retro-arc basin setting inferred to be linked to collision and subduction. This tectonic event mainly governed the Cenomanian (ca. 100 Ma) sea incursion in conjunction with a coeval global eustatic high resulting in the maximum geographic extent of the sea. The following Turonian-Coniacian (ca. 92-86 Ma) major regression, driven by eustasy, coincides with a sharp slowdown in tectonic subsidence related to a regime change in Pamir tectonism from compression to extension. The Santonian (ca. 86 Ma) major sea incursion was more likely controlled dominantly by eustasy as also evidenced by the coeval fluctuations in the west Siberian Basin. During the early Maastrichtian, the global Late Cretaceous cooling is inferred from the disappearance of mollusk-rich limestones and the dominance of bryozoan-rich and echinoderm-rich limestones in the Tajik Basin documenting the first evidence for the Late Cretaceous cooling event in Central Asia. Following the last Cretaceous sea incursion, a major regional restriction event, marked by the exceptionally thick (≤ 400 m) shelf evaporites is assigned a Danian-Selandian age (ca. 63-59 Ma). This is followed by the largest recorded proto-Paratethys sea incursion with a transgression estimated as early Thanetian (ca. 59-57 Ma) and a regression within the Ypresian (ca. 53-52 Ma). The transgression of the next incursion is now constrained as early Lutetian (ca. 47-46 Ma), whereas its regression is constrained as late Lutetian (ca. 41 Ma) and is associated with a drastic increase in both tectonic subsidence and basin infilling. The age of the final and least pronounced sea incursion restricted to the westernmost margin of the Tarim Basin is assigned as Bartonian–Priabonian (ca. 39.7-36.7 Ma). We interpret the long-term westward retreat of the proto-Paratethys Sea starting at ca. 41 Ma to be associated with far-field tectonic effects of the Indo-Asia collision and Pamir/Tibetan plateau uplift. Short-term eustatic sea level transgressions are superimposed on this long-term regression and seem coeval with the transgression events in the other northern Peri-Tethyan sedimentary provinces for the 1st and 2nd Paleogene sea incursions. However, the last Paleogene sea incursion is interpreted as related to tectonism. The transgressive and regressive intervals of the proto-Paratethys Sea correlate well with the reported humid and arid phases, respectively in the Qaidam and Xining basins, thus demonstrating the role of the proto-Paratethys Sea as an important moisture source for the Asian interior and its regression as a contributor to Asian aridification. We lastly study the mechanics, relative contribution and preservation efficiency of ancient epicontinental seas as carbon sinks with new and existing data, using organic rich (sapropel) deposits dated to the PETM from the extensive epicontinental proto-Paratethys and West Siberian seas. We estimate ca. 1390±230 Gt organic C burial, a substantial amount compared to previously estimated global total excess organic C burial (ca. 1700-2900 Gt) is focused in the proto-Paratethys and West Siberian seas alone. We also speculate that enhanced organic carbon burial later over much of the proto-Paratethys (and later Paratethys) basin (during the deposition of the Kuma Formation and Maikop series, repectively) may have majorly contributed to drawdown of atmospheric carbon dioxide before and during the EOT cooling and glaciation of Antarctica. For past periods with smaller epicontinental seas, the effectiveness of this negative carbon cycle feedback was arguably diminished, and the same likely applies to the present-day. N2 - Im Gegensatz zu den heute vorherrschenden kontinentalen Bedingungen war die geologische Vergangenheit Zentralasiens auch Zeuge marin dominierter Phasen. Ein riesiges Schelfmeer, bekannt als Proto-Paratethys, erstreckte sich während der Kreidezeit bis zum Paläogen über Eurasien - von der Tethys im Mittelmeer bis zum Tarimbecken im Westen Chinas. Dieses Meer bildete sich vor etwa 160 Millionen Jahren während der Jurazeit, als das Wasser des Tethys-Ozeans nach Eurasien strömte. Es zog sich drastisch nach Westen zurück und wurde während des späten Eozän-Oligozäns (ca. 34 Ma) als Paratethys isoliert. Eine gut eingegrenzte zeitliche Einordnung und Paläogeographische Charakterisierung für die kretazisch-paläogenen proto-Paratethys-Meerestransgressionen in Zentralasien ist unerlässlich, um die Kontrollmechanismen und ihre Verbindung mit den paläoökologischen und paläoklimatischen Veränderungen in Asien richtig zu verstehen und zu unterscheiden. Die kreidezeitlich-paläogene tektonische Entwicklung des Pamir und Tibets und ihre Fernfeldeffekte spielen eine bedeutende Rolle für die Entwicklung der zentralasiatischen Becken und der proto-paläozoischen Meeresschwankungen. Aufgrund von Ungenauigkeiten bei der Datierung der Gesteine und widersprüchlichen Ergebnissen gab es jedoch bislang keinen Konsens über den Zeitpunkt der Meerestransgressionen. Die Interpretation der dabei abgelagerten Sedimentfolgen wurde in Frage gestellt. Hier präsentieren wir eine neue, zeitliche Einordung auf Grundlage von Biostratigraphie und Magnetostratigraphie sowie eine detaillierte Paläoumweltanalyse für die Transgressionen des kreidezeitlichen und paläogenen proto-Paratethys-Meeres im tadschikischen und Tarimbecken in Zentralasien. Dies ermöglicht es uns, die wichtigsten Triebkräfte der marinen Fluktuationen und ihre möglichen Auswirkungen auf das regionale und globale Klima zu identifizieren - insbesondere die asiatische Aridifizierung und die Störungen des globalen Kohlenstoffkreislaufs etwa während des paläozän-eozänen thermischen Maximums (PETM). Beckenweite tektonische Senkungsanalysen deuten darauf hin, dass die frühkretazische Transgressionsphase im Tadschikischen Becken mit einer Intensivierung der Kollisionstektonik im Pamir (zwischen ca. 130 und 90 Ma) und der damit verbundenen Bildung eines Retro-Arc-Beckens in Zusammenhang stehen. Die globale Abkühlung der Spätkreide wird aus dem Verschwinden von molluskenreichen Kalksteinen und der Dominanz von bryozoen- und echinodermenreichen Kalksteinen im Tadschikischen Becken abgeleitet. Dies liefert den ersten Nachweis für das Abkühlungsereignis der Spätkreide in Zentralasien. Wir interpretieren die langfristige paläogene Regression des Proto-Paratethys-Meeres Richtung Westen ab ca. 41 Ma mit den tektonischen Fernfeldeffekten der indo-asiatischen Kollision und der Hebung des Pamir/Tibetischen Plateaus. Die transgressiven und regressiven Intervalle der proto-Paratethys-See korrelieren gut mit den bekannten feuchten und ariden Phasen im Qaidam- bzw. Xining-Becken, was die Rolle der proto-Paratethys-See als wichtige Feuchtigkeitsquelle für das asiatische Binnenland und ihren Rückzug als Mitverursacher der asiatischen Aridifizierung verdeutlicht. Schließlich untersuchen wir die Wirkungsfaktoren, den relativen Beitrag und die Erhaltungseffizienz alter epikontinentaler Meere als Kohlenstoffsenken mit neuen und bestehenden Daten. Dabei verwenden wir organik-reiche Ablagerungen aus den ausgedehnten epikontinentalen Proto-Paratethys- und westsibirischen Meeren, die auf das PETM datiert sind. Wir schätzen eine Einlagerung von ca. 1390±230 Gt organischer Kohlenstoffverbindungen. Das stellt eine beachtliche Menge, verglichen mit der zuvor geschätzten globalen Gesamtmenge an überschüssiger organischer Kohlenstoffeinlagerung (ca. 1700-2900 Gt) dar, welche sich allein auf die Proto-Paratethys und die westsibirischen Meere konzentriert. Für vergangene und zukünftige Perioden mit kleineren epikontinentalen Meeren würde die Wirksamkeit dieser negativen Rückkopplung des Kohlenstoffkreislaufs wohl abnehmen. T2 - Kreidezeit - Paläogene Entwicklung des Proto-Paratethys-Meeres in Zentralasien KW - Geology KW - Paleoclimatology KW - Sedimentology KW - Stratigraphy KW - Paleogeography KW - Geologie KW - Paläoklimatologie KW - Sedimentologie KW - Stratigraphie KW - Paläogeographie Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-483295 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zapata, Sebastian Henao A1 - Cardona, A. A1 - Jaramillo, J. S. A1 - Patino, A. A1 - Valencia, V. A1 - Leon, S. A1 - Mejia, D. A1 - Pardo-Trujillo, A. A1 - Castaneda, J. P. T1 - Cretaceous extensional and compressional tectonics in the Northwestern Andes, prior to the collision with the Caribbean oceanic plateau JF - Gondwana research : international geoscience journal ; official journal of the International Association for Gondwana Research N2 - The Cretaceous units exposed in the northwestern segment of the Colombian Andes preserve the record of extensional and compressional tectonics prior to the collision with Caribbean oceanic terranes. We integrated field, stratigraphic, sedimentary provenance, whole rock geochemistry, Nd isotopes and U-Pb zircon data to understand the Cretaceous tectonostratigraphic and magmatic record of the Colombian Andes. The results suggest that several sedimentary successions including the Abejorral Fm. were deposited on top of the continental basement in an Early Cretaceous backarc basin (150-100 Ma). Between 120 and 100 Ma, the appearance of basaltic and andesitic magmatism (similar to 115-100 Ma), basin deepening, and seafloor spreading were the result of advanced stages of backarc extension. A change to compressional tectonics took place during the Late Cretaceous (100-80 Ma). During this compressional phase, the extended blocks were reincorporated into the margin, closing the former Early Cretaceous backarc basin. Subsequently, a Late Cretaceous volcanic arc was built on the continental margin: as a result, the volcanic rocks of the Quebradagrande Complex were unconformably deposited on top of the faulted and folded rocks of the Abejorral Fm. Between the Late Cretaceous and the Paleocene (80-60 Ma), an arc-continent collision between the Caribbean oceanic plateau and the South-American continental margin deformed the rocks of the Quebradagrande Complex and shut-down the active volcanic arc. Our results suggest an Early Cretaceous extensional event followed by compressional tectonics prior to the collision with the Caribbean oceanic plateau. (C) 2019 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Northern Andes KW - Paleogeography KW - Cretaceous KW - Extension KW - Convergent margins KW - Provenance Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2018.10.008 SN - 1342-937X SN - 1878-0571 VL - 66 SP - 207 EP - 226 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER -