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Abstract (EDOC: 9420)
The Asian–Australian monsoon is an important component of the
Earth’s climate system that influences the societal and economic
activity of roughly half the world’s population. The past strength
of the rain-bearing East Asian summer monsoon can be reconstructed
with archives such as cave deposits, but the winter
monsoon has no such signature in the hydrological cycle and has
thus proved difficult to reconstruct. Here we present high-resolution
records of the magnetic properties and the titanium content
of the sediments of Lake Huguang Maar in coastal southeast China
over the past 16,000 years, which we use as proxies for the strength
of the winter monsoon winds. We find evidence for stronger winter
monsoon winds before the Bølling–Allerød warming, during
the Younger Dryas episode and during the middle and late Holocene,
when cave stalagmites suggest weaker summer monsoons.
We conclude that this anticorrelation is best explained by migrations
in the intertropical convergence zone. Similar migrations of
the intertropical convergence zone have been observed in Central
America for the period AD 700 to 900 (refs 4–6), suggesting global
climatic changes at that time. From the coincidence in timing, we
suggest that these migrations in the tropical rain belt could have
contributed to the declines of both the Tang dynasty in China and
the Classic Maya in Central America.
(2007): Influence of the intertropical convergence zone on the East Asian monsoon. Nature, 445, 7123, 74-77.
(2007): Influence of the intertropical convergence zone on the East Asian monsoon. Nature, 445, 7123, 74-77.

