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Groundwater sapping as the cause of irreversible desertification of Hunshandake Sandy Lands,Inner Mongolia,northern China
Authors:Xiaoping Yang  Louis A Scuderi  Xulong Wang  Louis J Scuderi  Deguo Zhang  Hongwei Li  Steven Forman  Qinghai Xu  Ruichang Wang  Weiwen Huang  Shixia Yang
Abstract:In the middle-to-late Holocene, Earth’s monsoonal regions experienced catastrophic precipitation decreases that produced green to desert state shifts. Resulting hydrologic regime change negatively impacted water availability and Neolithic cultures. Whereas mid-Holocene drying is commonly attributed to slow insolation reduction and subsequent nonlinear vegetation–atmosphere feedbacks that produce threshold conditions, evidence of trigger events initiating state switching has remained elusive. Here we document a threshold event ca. 4,200 years ago in the Hunshandake Sandy Lands of Inner Mongolia, northern China, associated with groundwater capture by the Xilamulun River. This process initiated a sudden and irreversible region-wide hydrologic event that exacerbated the desertification of the Hunshandake, resulting in post-Humid Period mass migration of northern China’s Neolithic cultures. The Hunshandake remains arid and is unlikely, even with massive rehabilitation efforts, to revert back to green conditions.Earth’s climate is subject to abrupt, severe, and widespread change, with nonlinear vegetation–atmosphere feedbacks that produced extensive and catastrophic ecosystem shifts and subsequent cultural disruption and dispersion during the Holocene (17). In the early and middle Holocene, northern China’s eastern deserts, including much of the currently sparsely vegetated and semistabilized Hunshandake (Figs. 1 and and2),2), were covered by forests (8), reflecting significantly wetter climate associated with intensification of monsoon precipitation by up to 50% (6).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.Geographical location of the Hunshandake Sandy Lands (A) and its area (encircled by red line in B). The black rectangle in B marks the location of the enlarged maps C and D on the Right, and the green rectangle shows the location of Fig. 2. Map C shows the localities of water samples, and map D shows the localities of sections with stratigraphy presented in Fig. 3. The sand–paleosol section P (Fig. 3) is on the southern margin, and the site Bayanchagan marks the coring site of ref. 8. Rivers with headwaters in the Hunshandake likely formed by groundwater sapping are marked in blue. Drainages to the southwest and west are currently undergoing groundwater sapping, with substantial spring-driven flow found at the current river base level.Open in a separate windowFig. 2.(Left) Holocene lakes and channels in the Hunshandake and lake extent at selected epochs. Upper, middle, and lower lakes are indicated by points A, B, and C, respectively. Xilamulun River (point D) drains to the east. Groundwater-sapping headcuts at the upper reaches of incised canyons (point E) suggest a mid-Holocene interval of easterly surface flow, followed by groundwater drainage beginning at the ca. 4.2 ka event. Northern and central channels at point E are currently abandoned, and groundwater sapping has migrated to the southerly of the three channels shown. (Right) Cross-sections of the predrainage shift, northerly drainage into Dali Lake (Localities shown on the Left), showing the increase in widths of channels downstream (Vertical exaggeration ∼30:1).Monsoonal weakening, in response to middle-to-late Holocene insolation decrease, reduced precipitation, leading to a green/sandy shift and desertification across Inner Mongolia between ca. 5,000 and 3,000 y (years) ago (6). However, variations in the timing of this transition (9, 10) suggest local/regional thresholds or possibly environmental tipping by stochastic fluctuations. The impacts of this wet-to-dry shift in the Hunshandake, expressed as variations in surface and subsurface hydrology coincident with the termination of the formation of thick and spatially extensive paleosols, and the impacts of a ca. 4.2 ka (1 ka = 1,000 years) mid-Holocene desiccation of the Hunshandake on the development of early Chinese culture remain poorly understood and controversial (6, 11). Here we report for the first time to our knowledge on variability in a large early-to-middle Holocene freshwater lake system in China’s Hunshandake Sandy Lands and associated vegetation change, which demonstrates a model of abrupt green/desert switching. We document a possible hydrologic trigger event for this switching and discuss associated vegetation and hydrologic disruptions that significantly impacted human activities in the region.
Keywords:climate change  geomorphology  human activity  Holocene  geology
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