“…Recently, it was reported that the MMCO can be identified using pollen records (Sun JM and Zhang ZQ, 2008; Larsson et al, 2011; Miao YF et al, 2011; Hui ZC et al, 2018), geochemical records (Wan SM et al, 2009; Song YG et al, 2018), and magnetic records (Zan JB et al, 2015; Guan C et al, 2019). Compared with investigations of other climatic proxies, studies of environmental magnetism are convenient, nondestructive, and effective in treating loess‐paleosol sequences (Heller and Tungsheng, 1984; Verosub et al, 1993; Sun JM and Liu TS, 2000; An ZS et al, 2001; Guo ZT et al, 2002; Deng CL et al, 2005, 2006; Liu QS et al, 2007; Hao QZ et al, 2008) and fluviolacustrine sediments (Jiang HC et al, 2008; Ao H et al, 2010; Song CH et al, 2014; Fang XM et al, 2015; Zhang T et al, 2016; Fu CF et al, 2018; Zan JB et al, 2018), enabling us to reconstruct past climatic changes. Therefore, we performed rock magnetic measurements in the Tiejianggou Section.…”