首页|Arctic and sub-Arctic lake water d(2)H and d(18)O along a coastal-inland transect: Implications for interpreting water isotope proxy records
Arctic and sub-Arctic lake water d(2)H and d(18)O along a coastal-inland transect: Implications for interpreting water isotope proxy records
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NSTL
Elsevier
High-latitude lakes are sensitive to climate change and store information about large-scale circulation changes and catchment-integrated processes. Lakes are mainly recharged by meteoric water, meaning that some lake sediment proxies may indirectly archive the stable isotopic composition of hydrogen (delta H-2) and oxygen (delta O-18) of past precipitation. Yet, despite similar precipitation input, lakes within a region may exhibit a wide range of isotopic values due to the varying influence of inflow seasonality and evaporation. Moreover, the relative sensitivity of each lake to these controls may vary through time, something that is difficult to account for. Here, we evaluate the impact of variable inflow delta H-2 and evaporation on the lake water isotopic composition across northern Fennoscandia (Norway, Finland, and Sweden). We measured lake water delta H-2 and delta O-18 of 135 lakes spanning from the north Norwegian coast along a 460 km transect to the Bothnian Bay, sampled from 2018 to 2020. Our data show that both coastal and inland lakes are sensitive to distillation during moisture transport, and that lakes farther from the Atlantic Ocean are additionally impacted by evaporation. We estimated the isotopic composition of lake water inflow values for evapo-concentrated transect lakes (delta H-2(I)) using a Bayesian method. Resampled transect lakes had more depleted delta H-2(I) in 2020 than in 2019, indicating either that precipitation was H-2-depleted or that more winter precipitation contributed inflow to the lakes in 2020 compared to in 2019. We suggest that the more & nbsp;H-2-depleted values in 2020 were a response to a snow-rich winter, associated with extremely positive Arctic Oscillation (AO+) conditions and increased moisture supply from the North Atlantic. We find evidence that lake water isotopic variability in this region reflects a combination of seasonal precipitation changes associated with atmospheric circulation changes, and catchment-integrated evaporation. Careful consideration of the variable sensitivity to these processes is essential when making inferences about past climate based on lake water isotope proxies.
Lake water isotopesPrecipitation isotopesMoisture sourceEvaporationSeasonalityProxy interpretationATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION DYNAMICSSTABLE-ISOTOPESHYDROGEN ISOTOPESSEA-ICEOXYGENHOLOCENEPRECIPITATIONTRENDSCYCLESCANDINAVIA
Kjellman, Sofia E. E.、Thomas, Elizabeth K. K.、Schomacker, Anders