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Water Isotopes in the hydrology 10/03/18 Dana Mawlood

Water Isotopes in the hydrology 10/03/18 Dana Mawlood . Lecture outline: the hydrological cycle d D and d 18 O variability 3) fractionation processes d 18 O, d D of precipitation 5) modeling d 18 O precip. spectrometer light intake. Water Isotopic Variations.

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Water Isotopes in the hydrology 10/03/18 Dana Mawlood

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  1. Water Isotopes in the hydrology 10/03/18 Dana Mawlood • Lecture outline: • the hydrological cycle • dD and d18O variability • 3) fractionation processes • d18O, dD of precipitation • 5) modeling d18Oprecip spectrometer light intake

  2. Water Isotopic Variations NOTE: water isotopes are always reported with respect to SMOW Ocean d18O = 0 ± 2‰ dD = 0 ± 16‰ Lake Michigan d18O = -7‰ dD = -54‰ Lake Chad d18O = -20‰ dD = -110‰ Dead Sea d18O = +4.4‰ dD = 0‰ What processes explain these variations?

  3. Temperature effect on the d18O of precipitation holds for both spatial T variability and temporal variability Rozanski, 1993

  4. Surface Water Salinity-d18O relationship - tropics Fairbanks et al., 1997 Slope of d18O-salinity relationship is 0.273 in the deep tropics (<5 N and S), vs. 0.45 elsewhere. Why?

  5. The “Global Meteoric Water Line” – what happens to d18O happens to dD, but with a different a annual mean dD vs. d18O of precipitation But month-to-month variations at a given site fall off this line – “deuterium excess” Craig, 1961 Rozanski, 1993

  6. 1-3km Water Why don’t all waters fall on the GMWL? Or…. why do different “source” waters have different ‘deuterium excess’ values? Fact: water vapor above the ocean is -13‰ in d18O, not the -9.2‰ expected from equilibrium fractionation. Why? • Planetary boundary layer • the layer where exchange occurs • between the surface and the free • atmosphere • evaporation not purely • equilibrium process • what other type of fractionation • is involved? Given the potential for complicated boundary layer physics, it’s a wonder that the GMWL exists at all!

  7. Deuterium excess Humid regions will show smaller departures from GMWL than arid regions. Generally interpreted as a proxy for the “source” of the moisture.

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