EGU21-12398
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12398
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The late-Holocene records of sediment provenance/weathering in the Wular Lake catchment, Northwest Himalaya

Nafees Ahmad, Satinder Pal Singh, and Aasif Mohmad Lone
Nafees Ahmad et al.
  • Indian Institute of Science Education & Research Bhopal, Earth and Environmental Sciences, BHOPAL, India (nafees17@iiserb.ac.in)

The Wular Lake (area ~189 km2) in the Kashmir Valley (area ~16,000 km2) is fed by the Jhelum River, which is a large Himalayan tributary of the Indus River. The lake catchment seasonally receives precipitation from tropical (Indian Summer Monsoon, ISM) and subtropical (Western Disturbances, WD) moisture sources. Thus, the lake sediments provide a unique opportunity to explore the high-resolution archive of the synoptic-scale weathering intensity and pattern in the Northwest Himalaya under past hydroclimatic conditions. In this study, radiogenic Sr and Nd isotope compositions and lithic fractions (sand, silt, and clay) have been determined on detrital phases of a 2.2 m long sediment core retrieved from the Wular Lake. The 14C-AMS chronology of this core presents the sedimentary records of the last 4.2 ka. The Sr and Nd isotope data indicate that the lake sediments deposited during the late-Holocene are mostly sourced from the Tethyan Himalaya rather than other major lithologies. The marginal downcore variations of ±1.5 εNd unit (except two anomalous datapoints with large uncertainties at 0.8 ka and 2.0 ka) reveal no major shifts in the sediment provenance during the late-Holocene. On the other hand, the significant downcore variations are observed in 87Sr/86Sr (>0.001–0.004) showing well-resolved periods of higher and lower values than the late-Holocene average. The 87Sr/86Sr data unbiased by the grain-size sorting and carbonate contents seem to indicate a temporal dominance of chemical and physical modes of silicate weathering in the Northwest Himalaya before and after ~2 ka, respectively. Interestingly, an abrupt shift in the 87Sr/86Sr data during the Little Ice Age (~0.4–0.1 ka) reveals a multi-decadal response of the silicate weathering intensity in synchrony with the northern hemisphere temperature anomaly.

 

How to cite: Ahmad, N., Singh, S. P., and Lone, A. M.: The late-Holocene records of sediment provenance/weathering in the Wular Lake catchment, Northwest Himalaya, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12398, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12398, 2021.

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