1 Avigour A, Magaritz M, Issar A, et al. Sr isotope study of vein and cave calcites from southern Israel. Chem Geol, 1990, 82: 69-8169??
[2]
2 Verheyden S, Keppens E, Fairchild I J, et al. Mg, Sr and Sr isotope geochemistry of a Belgian Holocene speleothem: Implications for paleoclimatereconstructions. Chem Geol, 2000, 169: 131-144131??
[3]
4 Zhou H Y, Feng Y X, Zhao J X, et al. Deglacial variations of Sr and 87Sr/86Sr ratio recorded by a stalagmite from Central China and theirassociation with past climate and environment. Chem Geol, 2009, 268: 233-247233??
[4]
5 Bar-Matthews M, Ayalon A, Kaufman A, et al. The Eastern Mediterranean paleoclimate as a reflection of regional events: Soreq cave, Israel.Earth Planet Sci Lett, 1999, 166: 85-9585??
13 Han G L, Liu C Q. Strontium isotope and major ion chemistry of the rainwaters from Guiyang, Guizhou Province, China. Sci Total Environ,2006, 364: 165-174165??
18 Huang Y M, Fairchild I J. Partitioning of Sr2+ and Mg2+ into calcite under karst-analogue experimental conditions. Geochim CosmochimActa, 2001, 65: 47-6247??
[11]
19 Fairchild I J, Treble P C. Trace elements in speleothems as recorders of environmental change. Quat Sci Rev, 2009, 28: 449-468449??
[12]
20 Miller E K, Blum J D, Friedland A J. Determination of soil exchangeable-cation loss and weathering rates using Sr isotopes. Nature, 1993,362: 438-441438??
[13]
21 Dijkstra F A, Breemen N V, Jongmans A G, et al. Calcium weathering in forested soils and the effect of different tree species. Biogeochemistry,2003, 62: 253-275253??
[14]
22 Musgrove M, Banner J L. Controls on the spatial and temporal variability of vadose dripwater geochemistry: Edwards aquifer, centralTexas. Geochim Cosmochim Acta, 2004, 68: 1007-10201007??
[15]
23 Han G L, Liu C Q. Water geochemistry controlled by carbonate dissolution: A study of the river waters draining karst-dominated terrain,Guizhou Province, China. Chem Geol, 2004, 204: 1-211??
[16]
24 Banner J L, Musgrove M, Asmerom Y, et al. High-resolution temporal record of Holocene ground-water chemistry: Tracing links betweenclimate and hydrology. Geology, 1996, 24: 1049-10531049??
[17]
26 Johnson K R, Hu C Y, Belshaw N S, et al. Seasonal trace-element and stable-isotope variations in a Chinese speleothem: The potential forhigh-resolution paleomonsoon reconstruction. Earth Planet Sci Lett, 2006, 244: 394.407??
[18]
3 Li H C, Ku T L, You C F, et al. 87Sr/86Sr and Sr/Ca in speleothems for paleoclimate reconstruction in Central China between 70 and 280 kaago. Geochim Cosmochim Acta, 2005, 69: 3933-39473933??
[19]
6 Frumkin A, Stein M. The Sahara-East Mediterranean dust and climate connection revealed by strontium and uranium isotopes in a Jerusalemspeleothem. Earth Planet Sci Lett, 2004, 217: 451-464451??
14 Han G L, Tang Y, Wu Q X, et al. Chemical and strontium isotope characterization of rainwater in karst virgin forest, Southwest China.Atmos Environ, 2010, 44: 174-181174??
[24]
16 Bullen T, White A, Blum A, et al. Chemical weathering of a soil chronosequence on granitoid alluvium: II Mineralogic and isotopic constraintson the behavior of strontium. Geochim Cosmochim Acta, 1997, 61: 291-306291??
[25]
17 Pett-Ridge J C, Derry L A, Barrows J K. Ca/Sr and 87Sr/86Sr ratios as tracers of Ca and Sr cycling in the Rio Icacos watershed, LuquilloMountains, Puerto Rico. Chem Geol, 2009, 267: 32-4532??
[26]
25 Oster J L, Monta.ez I P, Guilderson T P, et al. Modeling speleothem δ 13C variability in a Central Sierra Nevada Cave using 14C and87Sr/86Sr. Geochim Cosmochim Acta, 2010, 74: 5228-52425228