Stable water isotope variation in a Central Andean watershed dominated by glacier and snowmelt
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Ohlanders, N.
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Stable water isotope variation in a Central Andean watershed dominated by glacier and snowmelt
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Abstract
Central Chile is an economically important region
for which water supply is dependent on snow- and ice melt.
Nevertheless, the relative contribution of water supplied by
each of those two sources remains largely unknown. This
study represents the first attempt to estimate the region’s
water balance using stable isotopes of water in streamflow
and its sources. Isotopic ratios of both H and O were monitored
during one year in a high-altitude basin with a moderate
glacier cover (11.5 %). We found that the steep altitude gradient
of the studied catchment caused a corresponding gradient
in snowpack isotopic composition and that this spatial
variation had a profound effect on the temporal evolution of
streamflow isotopic composition during snowmelt. Glacier
melt and snowmelt contributions to streamflow in the studied
basin were determined using a quantitative analysis of the
isotopic composition of streamflow and its sources, resulting
in a glacier melt contribution of 50–90% for the unusually
dry melt year of 2011/2012. This suggests that in (La Ni˜na)
years with little precipitation, glacier melt is an important
water source for central Chile. Predicted decreases in glacier
melt due to global warming may therefore have a negative
long-term impact on water availability in the Central Andes.
The pronounced seasonal pattern in streamflow isotope composition
and its close relation to the variability in snow cover
and discharge presents a potentially powerful tool to relate
discharge variability in mountainous, melt-dominated catchments
with related factors such as contributions of sources to
streamflow and snowmelt transit times.
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Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 17, 1035–1050, 2013
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