Ohta,T.,Li,G., Hirano,H., Sakai,T., Kozai,T.,Yoshikawa,T. and Kaneko,A.(2011): Early Cretaceous terrestrial weathering in northern China: Relationship between paleoclimate change and the phased evolution of the Jehol biota. Journal of Geology, 119(1), 81-96.

『中国北部の初期白亜紀風化:古気候変化と熱河省生物群の同調した進化』


Abstract
 The Jehol Biota from lower Cretaceous deposits in northern China provides an important record of terrestrial fauna and flora, including feathered dinosaurs and one of the earliest angiosperms. This biota underwent three development phases, with a relatively limited biodiversity in the early phase that rapidly diversified in the middle phase. This study analyzes the conditions of terrestrial paleoweathering during the lower Cretaceous as inferred from the geochemistry of mudstones, with the aim of assessing the role of paleoclimate change as a background factor that led to the phased evolution of the Jehol Biota. The analysis focuses on the Dabeigou and Dadinzi formations of Hebei Province, northern China, which record the early and middle phases of the Jehoi Biota, respectively. These fluvio-lacustrine sequences can be lithologically divided into lower and upper units. Geochemical weathering indices (e.g., W, ΣREE [total amount of rare earth elements], and ΔW) show a significant increases from the lower to the upper unit, indicating enhanced weathering of the hinterland. Based on a comparison with the W values of recent soils that developed under various climates, the obtained increase in W can be interpreted as indicating temporal increases in temperature and humidity. Therefore, the increase in hinterland weathering from the lower to the upper unit was possibly induced by a shift in the paleoclimate to a more temperate and humid state. The timing of this change in paleoclimate closely coincides with a shift in the Jehol Biota to an evolved phase. Consequently, this preliminary result indicates that paleoclimate change in terrestrial regions of northern China might have contributed to the development of the Jehol Biota.』

Introduction
Geological background
Material and methods
Results and discussion
 Source rock composition
 Diagenetic effects
 Hinterland weathering
 Relations between paleoweathering and biofacies
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
References cited


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