The pivotal role of evaporation in lake water isotopic variability across space and time in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
Citation:
Akers, Pete D., Kopec, Ben G., Klein, Eric S., Bailey, Hannah, Welker, Jeffrey M., The pivotal role of evaporation in lake water isotopic variability across space and time in a High Arctic periglacial landscape, Water Resources Research, 60, 10, 2024, e2023WR036121Download Item:
Abstract:
Rapidly changing climate is disrupting the High Arctic's water systems. As tracers of hydrological
processes, stable water isotopes can be used for high quality monitoring of Arctic waters to better reconstruct
past changes and assess future environmental threats. However, logistical challenges typically limit the length
and scope of isotopic monitoring in High Arctic landscapes. Here, we present a comprehensive isotopic survey
of 535 water samples taken in 2018 and 2019 of the lakes and other surface waters of the periglacial Pituffik
Peninsula in far northwest Greenland. The δ18O, δ2H, and deuterium‐excess values of these samples,
representing 196 unique sites, grant unprecedented insight into the environmental drivers of the regional
hydrology and water isotopic variability. We find that the spatial variability of lake water isotopes can best be
explained through evaporation and the hydrological ability of a lake to replace evaporative water losses with
precipitation and snowmelt. Temporally, summer‐long evaporation can drive lake water isotopes beyond the
isotopic range observed in precipitation, and wide interannual changes in lake water isotopes reflect annual
weather differences that influenced evaporation. Following this, water isotope samples taken at individual times
or sites in similar periglacial landscapes may have limited regional representativeness, and increasing the
spatiotemporal extent of isotopic sampling is critical to producing accurate and informative High Arctic
paleoclimate reconstructions. Overall, our survey highlights the diversity of isotopic compositions in Pituffik
surface waters, and our complete isotopic and geospatial database provides a strong foundation for future
researchers to study hydrological changes at Pituffik and across the Arctic.
Sponsor
Grant Number
National Science Foundation (NSF)
1852614
National Science Foundation (NSF)
1504141
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/akerspDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Akers, Pete
Sponsor:
National Science Foundation (NSF)National Science Foundation (NSF)
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Water Resources Research;60;
10;
Availability:
Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Smart & Sustainable Planet , Cryosphere , Earth Sciences for Climate Research , Geochemistry , Ground, surface water hydrology , Isotope GeochemistryDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2023WR036121ISSN:
0043-1397Metadata
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