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Featured researches published by Fasong Yuan.


Nature Communications | 2014

Paired Oxygen Isotope Records Reveal Modern North American Atmospheric Dynamics During the Holocene

Zhongfang Liu; Kei Yoshimura; Gabriel J. Bowen; Nikolaus H. Buenning; Camille Risi; Jeffrey M. Welker; Fasong Yuan

The Pacific North American (PNA) teleconnection has a strong influence on North American climate. Instrumental records and century-scale reconstructions indicate an accelerating tendency towards the positive PNA state since the mid-1850s, but much less is known about long-term PNA variability. Here we reconstruct PNA-like climate variability during the mid- and late Holocene using paired oxygen isotope records from two regions in North America with robust, anticorrelated isotopic response to the modern PNA. We identify mean states of more negative and positive PNA-like climate during the mid- and late Holocene, respectively. Superimposed on the secular change between states is a robust, quasi-200-year oscillation, which we associate with the de Vries solar cycle. These findings suggest the persistence of PNA-like climate variability throughout the mid- and late Holocene, provide evidence for modulation of PNA over multiple timescales and may help researchers de-convolve PNA pattern variation from other factors reflected in palaeorecords.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Ecosystem regime change inferred from the distribution of trace metals in Lake Erie sediments

Fasong Yuan; Richard Depew; Cheryl Soltis-Muth

Many freshwater and coastal marine ecosystems across the world may have undergone an ecosystem regime change due to a combination of rising anthropogenic disturbances and regional climate change. Such a change in aquatic ecosystems is commonly seen as shifts in algal species. But considerably less detail is known about the eutrophication history in terms of changes in algal productivity, particularly for a large lake with a great deal of spatial variability. Here we present an analysis of trace metals (Cu, Ni, Cd, and Pb) on a sediment core recovered from Lake Erie, off the Vermilion coast of northern Ohio, USA, to reconstruct the eutrophication history of the lake over the past 210 years. Following a slow eutrophication during European settlement, Lake Erie experienced a period of accelerated eutrophication, leading to an ecosystem regime transition into a eutrophic lake state in 1950. Our results suggested that the lakes biological productivity has ever since maintained fairly high even though a significant input reduction was realized from rigorous nutrient abatements that began as early as in 1969. This work underscored the role of in-lake biogeochemical cycling in nutrient dynamics of this already eutrophic lake.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2017

A Multi-Element Sediment Record of Hydrological and Environmental Changes from Lake Erie since 1800

Fasong Yuan

Concentrations of aluminum, arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium, calcium, chromium, cobalt, copper, iron, lead, magnesium, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, potassium, selenium, sodium, tin, titanium, vanadium, and zinc were measured in a surface sediment core from the Sandusky basin of Lake Erie to detail the history of hydrological and environmental changes back to 1800. The results from hierarchical cluster and principal component analyses revealed four elemental groups. All the trace elements clustering with aluminum, iron, and manganese in Group I were enriched due to increased inputs from anthropogenic sources. The two conservative elements sodium and potassium clustering in Group II showed patterns of changes like those of water-level fluctuations. The two carbonate elements calcium and magnesium clustering in Group III showed intriguing but complex carbonate biogeochemistry associated with biogenic production, organic acid-induced dissolution and dilution by organic and aluminosilicate materials. The terrigenous element titanium in Group IV experienced two stages of depletion from increased organic fluxes in the 1820s and 1950s. Following the enactments of stringent regulations in the early 1970s, many of these elemental inputs have reduced considerably. But the concurrent reductions in the Sandusky basin were much slower than previously thought. Large increases in inputs from local storages (internal loading) were required to account for the slow reductions. The increased internal loading was caused by augmented organic materials from accelerated eutrophication which facilitated the transfer, transport, and cycling of many trace metals. This work has implications in ongoing research efforts to tackle the eutrophication problem because the complex ecosystem including the internal loading has changed considerably over the past two centuries.


Chemical Geology | 2008

Characteristics of oxygen-18 and deuterium composition in waters from the Pecos River in American Southwest

Fasong Yuan; Seiichi Miyamoto


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2004

A 1200 year record of hydrologic variability in the Sierra Nevada from sediments in Walker Lake, Nevada

Fasong Yuan; Braddock K. Linsley; Steve P. Lund; John P. McGeehin


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2011

Evaporative enrichment of oxygen-18 and deuterium in lake waters on the Tibetan Plateau

Fasong Yuan; Yongwei Sheng; Tandong Yao; Chaojun Fan; Junli Li; Hui Zhao; Yanbin Lei


Geophysical Research Letters | 2005

Dominant processes controlling water chemistry of the Pecos River in American southwest

Fasong Yuan; S. Miyamoto


Chemical Geology | 2012

Chemical and isotopic evaluation of sulfur sources and cycling in the Pecos River, New Mexico, USA

Fasong Yuan; Bernhard Mayer


Applied Geochemistry | 2007

CHANGES IN MAJOR ELEMENT HYDROCHEMISTRY OF THE PECOS RIVER IN THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST SINCE 1935

Fasong Yuan; S. Miyamoto; Shilpa Anand


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2006

Late Holocene lake-level fluctuations in Walker Lake, Nevada, USA

Fasong Yuan; Braddock K. Linsley; Stephen S. Howe; Steve P. Lund; John P. McGeehin

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Chaojun Fan

Cleveland State University

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John P. McGeehin

United States Geological Survey

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Steve P. Lund

University of Southern California

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Jeffrey M. Welker

University of Alaska Anchorage

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Junli Li

University of California

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Max R. Koran

Cleveland State University

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