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Dive into the research topics where Zhenqing Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhenqing Zhang.


Geology | 2010

Late Oligocene–Miocene mid-latitude aridification and wind patterns in the Asian interior

Jimin Sun; Jie Ye; Wenyu Wu; Xijun Ni; Shundong Bi; Zhenqing Zhang; Weiming Liu; Jin Meng

The Asian interior has the largest mid-latitude arid zone in the Northern Hemisphere, and so has become increasingly attractive for studying the initiation and the past extent of aridification in this zone. Given the enormousness of the Asian interior, it remains unclear how old and extensive the eolian deposits might have been, and what wind regimes have been responsible for the formation of the mid-latitude arid zone. Here we report new eolian records of widespread Tertiary eolian deposits in a region far from the Chinese Loess Plateau, the giant Junggar inland basin of northwestern China. Our results demonstrate that the earliest eolian deposition initiated ca. 24 Ma. We interpret that the Tertiary eolian dust in the Junggar Basin was transported by westerly winds, possibly from areas in Kazakhstan; the dust differs from the airborne dust transported by winter monsoon winds from the deserts of Mongolia and northern China that accumulated on the Loess Plateau. These results further reveal that the climate pattern, similar to that of the present, has prevailed at least since the latest Oligocene in Central Asia.


Geology | 2009

New evidence on the age of the Taklimakan Desert

Jimin Sun; Zhenqing Zhang; Liyuan Zhang

The Taklimakan Desert is the worlds second-largest shifting sand desert, located in the rain shadow of the Tibetan Plateau. The initiation of desert formation in the Asian interior is one of the most prominent climate changes in the Northern Hemisphere during the Cenozoic Era. Dating the earliest formation of this desert is important for understanding the climatic effects of the uplifted Tibetan Plateau. Here we report 1071-m-thick Neogene deposits with inter calated eolian dune sands from the only outcrop in the central Taklimakan Desert. Based on paleo- magnetic measurements, biostratigraphic age control, and previous electron spin resonance dating results, the oldest in situ eolian dune sands were confi rmed to be ca. 7 Ma, much older than the previous reported wind-blown siltstone from the southern edge of the Taklimakan Desert. This new result indicates that desert conditions initiated ca. 7 Ma in the center of the Tarim Basin. We attribute this event to the late Cenozoic climatic deterioration and/or to the rain-shadow effect caused by late Miocene uplift of the northern Tibetan margin.


Scientific Reports | 2015

The peatlands developing history in the Sanjiang Plain, NE China, and its response to East Asian monsoon variation

Zhenqing Zhang; Wei Xing; Guoping Wang; Shouzheng Tong; Xianguo Lv; Jimin Sun

Studying the peatlands accumulation and carbon (C) storage in monsoonal areas could provide useful insights into the response of C dynamics to climate variation in the geological past. Here, we integrated 40 well-dated peat/lake sediment cores to reveal the peatlands evolution history in the Sanjiang Plain and examine its links to East Asian monsoon variations during the Holocene. The results show that 80% peatlands in the Sanjiang Plain initiated after 4.7 ka (1 ka = 1000 cal yr BP), with the largest initiating frequency around 4.5 ka. The mean C accumulation rate of peatlands in the Sanjiang Plain exhibits a synchronous increase with the peatlands expansion during the Holocene. Such a peatlands expanding and C accumulating pattern corresponds well to the remarkable drying event subsequent to the Holocene monsoon maximum. We suggest that in addition to the locally topographic conditions, Holocene variations of East Asian summer monsoon (especially its associated precipitation) have played a critical role in driving the peatlands initiation and expansion in the Sanjiang Plain.


Tectonophysics | 2009

Syntectonic growth strata and implications for late Cenozoic tectonic uplift in the northern Tian Shan, China

Jimin Sun; Zhenqing Zhang


Global and Planetary Change | 2008

Palynological evidence for the Mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum recorded in Cenozoic sediments of the Tian Shan Range, northwestern China

Jimin Sun; Zhenqing Zhang


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2014

Palynological evidence for the latest Oligocene−early Miocene paleoelevation estimate in the Lunpola Basin, central Tibet

Jimin Sun; Qinghai Xu; Weiming Liu; Zhenqing Zhang; Lei Xue; Ping Zhao


Global and Planetary Change | 2011

Palynological evidence for Neogene environmental change in the foreland basin of the southern Tianshan range, northwestern China

Zhenqing Zhang; Jimin Sun


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2012

Stepwise expansions of C4 biomass and enhanced seasonal precipitation and regional aridity during the Quaternary on the southern Chinese Loess Plateau

Jimin Sun; Tongyan Lü; Zhenqing Zhang; Xu Wang; Weiguo Liu


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2014

Historical variation and recent ecological risk of heavy metals in wetland sediments along Wusuli River, Northeast China

Chuanyu Gao; Qianxin Lin; Kunshan Bao; Haiyang Zhao; Zhenqing Zhang; Wei Xing; Xianguo Lu; Guoping Wang


Quaternary International | 2014

Characterizing trace and major elemental distribution in late Holocene in Sanjiang Plain, Northeast China: Paleoenvironmental implications

Chuanyu Gao; Kunshan Bao; Qianxin Lin; Haiyang Zhao; Zhenqing Zhang; Wei Xing; Xianguo Lu; Guoping Wang

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Guoping Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jimin Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wei Xing

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chuanyu Gao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xianguo Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Kunshan Bao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xianguo Lv

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Haiyang Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qianxin Lin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shouzheng Tong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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