Seasonal Variations in Triple Oxygen Isotope Ratios of Precipitation in the Western and Central United States

Triple oxygen isotope ratios (∆′17O) offer new opportunities to improve reconstructions of past climate by quantifying evaporation, relative humidity, and diagenesis in geologic archives. However, the utility of ∆′17O in paleoclimate applications is hampered by a limited understanding of how precipi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Paleoceanography and paleoclimatology Vol. 38; no. 4
Main Authors: Aron, P. G., Li, S., Brooks, J. R., Welker, J. M., Levin, N. E.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-04-2023
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Summary:Triple oxygen isotope ratios (∆′17O) offer new opportunities to improve reconstructions of past climate by quantifying evaporation, relative humidity, and diagenesis in geologic archives. However, the utility of ∆′17O in paleoclimate applications is hampered by a limited understanding of how precipitation ∆′17O values vary across time and space. To improve applications of ∆′17O, we present δ18O, d‐excess, and ∆′17O data from 26 precipitation sites in the western and central United States and three streams from the Willamette River Basin in western Oregon. In this data set, we find that precipitation ∆′17O tracks evaporation but appears insensitive to many controls that govern variation in δ18O, including Rayleigh distillation, elevation, latitude, longitude, and local precipitation amount. Seasonality has a large effect on ∆′17O variation in the data set and we observe higher seasonally amount‐weighted average precipitation ∆′17O values in the winter (40 ± 15 per meg [± standard deviation]) than in the summer (18 ± 18 per meg). This seasonal precipitation ∆′17O variability likely arises from a combination of sub‐cloud evaporation, atmospheric mixing, moisture recycling, sublimation, and/or relative humidity, but the data set is not well suited to quantitatively assess isotopic variability associated with each of these processes. The seasonal ∆′17O pattern, which is absent in d‐excess and opposite in sign from δ18O, appears in other data sets globally; it showcases the influence of seasonality on ∆′17O values of precipitation and highlights the need for further systematic studies to understand variation in ∆′17O values of precipitation. Key Points Precipitation δ′18O‐δ′17O slopes often differ from the 0.528 reference value Precipitation ∆′17O values are typically higher in the winter and lower in the summer Different controls on ∆′17O and δ18O mean that ∆′17O provides new information for paleoclimate reconstructions
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ISSN:2572-4517
2572-4525
DOI:10.1029/2022PA004458