Magnetic record of Mio-Pliocene red clay and Quaternary loess-paleosol sequence in the Chinese Loess Plateau

This article presents magnetic data of a 300-m-thick Mio-Pliocene red clay and Quaternary loess-paleosol sequence near Chaona town in the Central Chinese Loess Plateau. Detailed magnetostratigraphy shows that the aeolian red clay began to accumulate at ca. 8.1 Ma. Here, we presented a high-resolution rock magnetic data at 20–40 cm intervals within 4.5–8 ka span per sample of this section, which has been published in Song et al. (2014) [1] and (2017) [2]. The dataset including the following magnetic parameters: mass magnetic susceptibility (χ), frequency-dependent susceptibility (χfd), saturation magnetization (Ms), saturation remanent magnetization (Mrs), coercive force (Bc), remanent coercivity (Bcr), saturation isothermal remanent magnetization (SIRM) and S-ratio. Magnetic susceptibility and hysteresis parameters were measured at Lanzhou University and Kyoto University, respectively. This data provides a high-resolution rock magnetic evidences for understanding East Asia Monsoon change, Asian interior aridification and tectonic effect of the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau since middle Miocene period.


Specifications
It is helpful to understand the East Asia Monsoon revolution and Asian interior aridification. Provide some clues for understanding the uplift process of the Tibetan Plateau and its effects during late Cenozoic period.
Useful to researchers and experts working in environmental magnetism, paleoclimate change, past global changes, Quaternary geology and other related fields.
Magnetic susceptibility (χ) and SIRM are function of magnetic mineralogy, concentration and granulometry. Paleosol layers developed under warm and wet interglacial periods have relatively higher both χ and χ fd because of stronger pedogensis in the Chinese Loess Plateau, they have widely been employed as proxies of East Asian summer monsoon intensity. The shapes of the hysteresis loops may be an indicator of the degree of pedogenesis. M rs and M s are closely related to the type and content of magnetic minerals. Higher M rs and M s values indicate an increase in ferrimagnetic minerals, such as magnetite and maghemite, and lower values imply the absence of strongly ferrimagnetic minerals. The high coercivity (B c , B cr ) may imply the presence of antiferromagnetic goethite and hematite. Rock magnetic data show that the loess layers are characterized by relatively high coercivity (B c and B cr ), lower magnetic susceptibility (χ, χ fd ), and the paleosol layers are characterized by relatively high χ, χ fd and SIRM. S-ratio is a good indicator of the proportion of magnetite to hematite, higher S-ratio means more abundant concentration of magnetite than hematite.
Based on the magnetic data, we reconstructed the history of the East Asia monsoons during the last 8 Ma and its possible driving mechanism [1,2,6]. We also explored the middle Pleistocene climate transition in this section, which began at~1.26 Ma and was completed by~0.53 Ma [1]. Our work also indicated that the variations of both the East Asian Summer Monsoon and Winter Monsoon before 4.3 Ma were closely related to global cooling and that the intensified Summer Monsoon during the late Pliocene was primarily caused by tectonic events, including the gradual closure of the Panama Seaway and the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau, rather than by global cooling [2].

Materials
The Chaona section is located at Zhengjiashizi Village (107°13´E, 35°02´N) about 5 km south from Chaona Town of Lingtai County, Gansu Province. The section is composed with 175 Quaternary loesspaleosol sequence and 125 late Miocene-Pliocene red clay sequence with a paleomagnetic age 8.1 Ma [3,4]. More than 400 sets of oriented block samples at 0.2-2 m interval for paleomagnetic measurements and over 2600 discrete samples at 0.10-0.2 m interval for various proxies analyzes were collected [1,2].

Magnetochronology
Each oriented bulk sample was split into three sets of parallel cubic specimens with a dimension of 2 × 2 × 2 cm for paleomagnetic analysis. The paleomagnetic measurement was performed in Lanzhou Geological Institute, and Geology and Geophysics Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and rechecked in the Paleomagnetism Laboratory of Kyoto University. The magnetic remanence was measured on an American DSM2 spinner magnetometer or 2 G cryogenic magnetometer. 11-18 steps of progressive alternating field demagnetization (AFD) were carried out for most of the samples at 2-10 mT intervals to 70 mT, and progressive thermal demagnetization (ThD) was done for some typical samples at 20-100°C intervals in about 22 steps from a room temperature to 710°C (Fig. 1).The magnetochronologic data indicates that bottom age of the section is around 8.1 Ma [3,4].
Magnetic hysteresis parameters (Fig. 3) were measured using an Alternating Gradient Magnetometer (AGM) Micromag TM 2900 model at the paleomagnetism laboratory of Kyoto University, with a maximum field of 1.0 T and a 2 mT increment [1,2]. Saturation magnetization (M s ), saturation remanent magnetization (M rs ) and coercive force (B c ) were calculated after removal of the paramagnetic component. Remanent coercivity (B cr ) was measured by applying a forward field of 1.0 T followed by the application of reverse fields of increasing strength and the change in remanence measured at each step. The data enable various interparametric ratios to be calculated using the IRM imparted at a high field (here 1.0 T) and the back IRM value at various reverse field strengths (e.g. −0.3 T). These parameters reflect variations in the coercivity spectrum of the magnetic mineral

Transparency document. Supporting information
Transparency data associated with this article can be found in the online version at https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.dib.2017.11.059.

Appendix A. Supporting information
Supplementary data associated with this article can be found in the online version at https://doi. org/10.1016/j.dib.2017.11.059.