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Magnetostratigraphy of a long Quaternary sediment core in the South Yellow Sea

Continental shelves serve as a bridge between the continent and ocean and sediments in this region are sensitive to land-sea interaction, sea-level variation and local subsidence. In this study, we present a comprehensive magnetic study of the longest sediment core (CSDP-1, 300.1 m) recovered from t...

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Published in:Quaternary science reviews 2016-07, Vol.144, p.1-15
Main Authors: Liu, Jianxing, Liu, Qingsong, Zhang, Xunhua, Liu, Jian, Wu, Zhiqiang, Mei, Xi, Shi, Xuefa, Zhao, Quanhong
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Continental shelves serve as a bridge between the continent and ocean and sediments in this region are sensitive to land-sea interaction, sea-level variation and local subsidence. In this study, we present a comprehensive magnetic study of the longest sediment core (CSDP-1, 300.1 m) recovered from the South Yellow Sea. The major magnetic minerals in the studied sediments are magnetite, hematite and greigite. Greigite records a chemical remanent magnetization, which can be removed effectively by thermal demagnetization. The magnetostratigraphy defined in this study contains the Matuyama-Brunhes boundary (M/B, 781 ka) at ∼73.68 m, which is consistent with results from adjacent cores. The base of the Quaternary (∼2.6 Ma) in the Yellow Sea is recovered for the first time at a depth of 227.16 m. The basal age of the core is estimated to be ∼3.50 Ma. It indicates that the first transgression of the Yellow Sea occurred no later than ∼1.7 Ma. Succeeding large amplitude regressions occurred in some cold periods such as during MIS 20, MIS 18, and MIS 10. Our results provide the first chronology that brackets the entire Quaternary and we reconstruct the sedimentary evolution of the Yellow Sea with robust age constraints, which provides an important framework for further paleoenvironmental and tectonic studies. •Magnetic mineral assemblages in the continental shelf sediments are very complex.•We show how to construct magnetostratigraphy for the continental shelf sediments.•Care should be taken during paleomagnetic studies on greigite-bearing sediments.•The base of the Quaternary in the Yellow Sea is recovered for the first time.•Sedimentary evolution of the Yellow Sea is reconstructed with robust age controls.
ISSN:0277-3791
1873-457X
DOI:10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.05.025