Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability

Abstract The island of New Guinea comprises arc‐ophiolite units tectonically imbricated with continental rocks offscraped from the colliding Australian plate and contributes large amounts of sediment to the ocean. A sequence deposited close to the north shore and sampled at International Ocean Disco...

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Main Authors: Yifan Du, Peter D. Clift, Andrew Carter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-02-01
Series:Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GC011883
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author Yifan Du
Peter D. Clift
Andrew Carter
author_facet Yifan Du
Peter D. Clift
Andrew Carter
author_sort Yifan Du
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The island of New Guinea comprises arc‐ophiolite units tectonically imbricated with continental rocks offscraped from the colliding Australian plate and contributes large amounts of sediment to the ocean. A sequence deposited close to the north shore and sampled at International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Site U1485 is largely formed from sediment delivered by the Sepik River. We reconstruct changing intensities of chemical weathering and source bedrock contributions for 330 ka to assess how they are influenced by orbitally driven climate change. Higher smectite/kaolinite ratios indicate a more seasonal chemical weathering during glacial times, with interglacial periods marked by more tropical weathering. Nd and Sr isotopes show that erosion of continental bedrock is at its maximum during interglacial periods when rainfall was more intense and penetrated deeper into the Highlands, where silicic units are preferentially exposed. During colder/drier time, erosion is more focused in arc‐ophiolite lowland regions. The Chemical Index of Alteration (CIA) and several other major element proxies imply a gradual increase in the alteration intensity of sediments due to chemical weathering. Comparing the bulk sediment and source rock compositions shows long‐term variability in the consumption rates of CO2. Weathering is most effective at removing atmospheric CO2 during glacial times when ΔCO2 values (mol/kg) reach around three times those seen in major mainland Asian river systems. Conversely, CO2 consumption is reduced during interglacial maxima, implying that weathering in New Guinea, controlled by orbital cycles, may amplify global climate variations.
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spelling doaj-art-0d987ae60af844eb8c2cc37487d0c1be2025-08-20T03:09:04ZengWileyGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems1525-20272025-02-01262n/an/a10.1029/2024GC011883Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate VariabilityYifan Du0Peter D. Clift1Andrew Carter2Department of Earth Sciences University College London London UKDepartment of Earth Sciences University College London London UKSchool of Natural Sciences Birkbeck College London London UKAbstract The island of New Guinea comprises arc‐ophiolite units tectonically imbricated with continental rocks offscraped from the colliding Australian plate and contributes large amounts of sediment to the ocean. A sequence deposited close to the north shore and sampled at International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Site U1485 is largely formed from sediment delivered by the Sepik River. We reconstruct changing intensities of chemical weathering and source bedrock contributions for 330 ka to assess how they are influenced by orbitally driven climate change. Higher smectite/kaolinite ratios indicate a more seasonal chemical weathering during glacial times, with interglacial periods marked by more tropical weathering. Nd and Sr isotopes show that erosion of continental bedrock is at its maximum during interglacial periods when rainfall was more intense and penetrated deeper into the Highlands, where silicic units are preferentially exposed. During colder/drier time, erosion is more focused in arc‐ophiolite lowland regions. The Chemical Index of Alteration (CIA) and several other major element proxies imply a gradual increase in the alteration intensity of sediments due to chemical weathering. Comparing the bulk sediment and source rock compositions shows long‐term variability in the consumption rates of CO2. Weathering is most effective at removing atmospheric CO2 during glacial times when ΔCO2 values (mol/kg) reach around three times those seen in major mainland Asian river systems. Conversely, CO2 consumption is reduced during interglacial maxima, implying that weathering in New Guinea, controlled by orbital cycles, may amplify global climate variations.https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GC011883weatheringerosionclimateprovenanceNew Guinea
spellingShingle Yifan Du
Peter D. Clift
Andrew Carter
Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
weathering
erosion
climate
provenance
New Guinea
title Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability
title_full Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability
title_fullStr Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability
title_full_unstemmed Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability
title_short Chemical Weathering and Erosional Response of Northern New Guinea to Orbital‐Scale Climate Variability
title_sort chemical weathering and erosional response of northern new guinea to orbital scale climate variability
topic weathering
erosion
climate
provenance
New Guinea
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GC011883
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AT peterdclift chemicalweatheringanderosionalresponseofnorthernnewguineatoorbitalscaleclimatevariability
AT andrewcarter chemicalweatheringanderosionalresponseofnorthernnewguineatoorbitalscaleclimatevariability