Water (Jun 2019)

The Analysis of Short-Term Dataset of Water Stable Isotopes Provides Information on Hydrological Processes Occurring in Large Catchments from the Northern Italian Apennines

  • Federico Cervi,
  • Andrea Dadomo,
  • Giovanni Martinelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w11071360
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1360

Abstract

Read online

This study discusses a dataset of water stable isotopes from precipitation (4 rain gauges) and surficial water (9 rivers) from the northern Italian Apennines, an area in which clay-rich bedrocks widely outcrop and the runoff response to precipitation events is very rapid. The dataset has been compiled starting from existing data that had previously been published in the literature and consists of monthly values of stable isotopes oxygen-18 (18O) and deuterium (2H) lasting over the period from January 2003 to December 2006 (precipitation) and from January 2006 to December 2007 (surficial water). For this period, mean residence times estimated by means of a sine-wave fitting technique make evident the significant differences over time spent by water molecules within the 9 catchments. Moreover, isotopic compositions of rivers deviated from those of precipitations revealing the influence of some catchment characteristics in differentiating the isotopic composition in rivers. Further correlations between mean residence times of river water and selected catchment characteristics reveal the role of orography and bedrocks in delaying the water molecules during their flow-paths. In addition, time series and cross−correlation analyses indicate a certain control by the main watershed divide on the isotopic composition of river waters, which is reflected in a progressive isotopic variation with longitude. The study shows that, despite using a short-time dataset (2-years for surficial water) of sparse stable isotopes can provide remarkable indications for depicting hydrological processes in large catchments made up of clay-rich bedrocks.

Keywords