Project Details
Bridging Timescales of Tibetan Plateau Environmental Change: An Integration of Earth System Modeling with Modern and Paleo- environmental Proxies
Subject Area
Palaeontology
Term
from 2011 to 2016
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 202948994
The Tibetan Plateau is the largest orogenic plateau on Earth and formed in response to continental collision over the last ~50 Million years. The formation of this high-elevation plateau surface is invoked for changes in global and regional climate, as well as in ocean chemistry. Despite their significance, the processes responsible for Tibetan Plateau formation and the evolution of global and regional climate during its formation are poorly resolved. In this proposal we build upon our previous related work on the Andean Plateau. Our focus is to quantify how global and regional climate have responded to Tibetan Plateau surface uplift over timescales ranging from millenial (e.g. last glacial maximum) to geologic (~50 Ma). More specifically, we will test the hypothesis that if Indo-Asian collision, Cenozoic plateau surface uplift, and glaciations are responsible for climate change, then appropriately parameterized paleoclimate simulations of these processes should predict the observed variability in Tibetan proxy data (e.g. δ18O in soil carbonates, lacustrine climate archives), and quantify the paleoclimate and paleoelevation history of the plateau over different time scales. We will test this hypothesis through an integration of global and regional paleoclimate models with paleoclimate proxies. These experiments will bridge spatial and temporal timescales of environmental change over the plateau thereby forming a baseline for understanding modern and potential future climate variability over the plateau.
DFG Programme
Priority Programmes
International Connection
China, USA
Participating Persons
Professor Dr. Christopher J. Poulsen; Professor Dr. Lide Tian