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Changes in past East Asian climate and monsoon intensity have been inferred from a wide variety of paleoclimate archives. However, quantitative reconstruction of land surface temperatures in East Asia remains sparse. Here we present a 75-kyr temperature record derived from the carbonate clumped isotope composition (Δ 47 ) of land snail shells from a loess-paleosol sequence at Yuanbao, on western edge of the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP). Modern growing season (mid-April to September) temperature based on Δ 47 (T 47 ) is 21.2 ± 1.2 °C. The T 47 record reveals that there are certain periods where land surface temperatures were lower: the last glacial maximum (LGM) was ∼7 °C colder, Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS3) ∼5 °C and MIS4 ∼6 °C, but also the mid-Holocene was ∼9 ℃ colder than present day. Temperatures similar to present day occurred during Northern Hemisphere Summer Insolation (NHSI) minima within MIS3 and the Bølling-Allerød (BA). Monsoon precipitation reconstructions based on organic and inorganic geochemical proxies from the same loess-paleosol section indicate that these warm periods are characterized by relatively dry conditions. This is further supported by the relative enrichment in the temperature-independent oxygen isotope composition of snail body water (δ 18 O bw ) during these time intervals, reflecting a negative moisture balance. In contrast, the unexpected low T 47 for the mid-Holocene could be the result of wet conditions. Our record thus suggests that soil moisture availability exerts a strong influence on land surface temperatures recorded by snails stored in loess archives. • We present a 75-kyr clumped isotope temperature (T 47 ) record for the western CLP. • Modern snail T 47 reflects land surface growing season temperature. • Last glacial T 47 was ∼7 °C lower than present. • T 47 and snail body water-δ 18 O show a coupling between temperature and hydroclimate. • Hydroclimate strongly modulates land surface temperatures recorded by snails.
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Jingjing Guo
Martin Ziegler
Jibao Dong
Quaternary Science Reviews
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Utrecht University
Institute of Earth Environment
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Guo et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0bfe08166b51b53d3794d4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2026.110063
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