Landscape evolution and human activities in the lower Yellow River revealed by core chronologies
ID:95 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2024-10-09 16:53:43 Hits:807 Poster Presentation

Start Time:2025-01-15 18:50(Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:15min

Session:S27 Session 27-Coastal Environment Evolution: From the Past to the Future » S27-PCoastal Environment Evolution: From the Past to the Future

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Abstract
Floodplain in river lower reaches is one of the most dynamic places, which is continuously changing its shape and structure controlled by the balance among sea-level, sediment supply, accommodation space and human activities. The evolution of the lower Yellow Rive Plain has witnessed the shaping influence of these factors, with Yellow River channel migrates between the North China Plain (northern path) and Huaibei Plain (southern path). This study investigated the formation and transformation of fluvial and lacustrine systems along the southern path and their implications for the pattern of archaeological sites distribution (human activities). We collected 16 OSL samples from the upper 10 meters of core JZK05 (total depth of 130 m) in Jining, southwest Shandong Province, and constructed a chronological framework. The OSL ages ranged from >123 ± 12 ka to 0.14 ± 0.01 ka, revealing three significant hiatuses with age gaps at 0.40–1.53 ka, 2.29–4.75 ka, and 5.39–47.7 ka. Pre-Holocene sediments consist of hard clay with silt, presented in both interfluve and incised valley formed during low-stand sea level. Holocene sediments, identified above 5.89 m, dated back to ca. 5.39 ka. During the Holocene, the southwest Shandong region experienced alternating floodplain and lacustrine environments, driven by Yellow River avulsion and channel migration. The formation of Holocene lakes in the southwest Shandong Plain occurred in three stages: the earliest lakes developed at around 4 ka in the western part, near the Yellow River alluvial fan, followed by lakes formed at ca. 2-2.5 ka near the Nansi Lake area, and the most recent phase of lake development at ca. 1 ka distributed throughout the region. The frequent avulsions and floods of the Yellow River were the primary drivers of lake formation and contributed to the decline of local civilizations and prompted population migrations.
 
Keywords
OSL,floodplain,Holocene lakes,the lower Yellow River avulsion,southwest Shandong Plain,human activities
Speaker
Bohui Liu
Master shantou university

Submission Author
Bohui Liu shantou university
Weitao Yuan College of Civil and Transportation, Weifang University
Cailu Wang Shantou University
Zhiyan Wu Shantou University
Zengbing Sun Shandong Provincial NO.4 Institute of Geological and Mineral Survey
Xiaojun Zhou Shantou University
Ruonan Tian Shantou University
Zhongping Lai Shantou University
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Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Jan 13

    2025

    to

    Jan 17

    2025

  • Sep 27 2024

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Feb 17 2025

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University
Organized By
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University
Department of Earth Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China
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