Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4574679 Geoderma 2010 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The fractionation of H isotopes in global precipitation leads to a continuous decrease in 2H concentrations of precipitation with increasing latitude, altitude and continentality. Thus, the local precipitation, soil and ground water used by plants for photosynthesis or consumed during neoformation of pedogenic clay minerals often have a spatially diagnostic δ2H value. We hypothesize that the δ2H value of isotopically nonexchangeable H in bulk soil (composed of C-bonded H in soil organic matter (SOM) and the nonexchangeable fraction of O-bonded H in pedogenic clay minerals) is correlated with the mean δ2H value of local precipitation water at the place and time of biomass production and clay mineral neoformation, respectively. We equilibrated soil samples with water of known isotopic composition prior to δ2H analysis with an Elemental Analyzer-Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer (EA-IRMS) to determine the δ2H value of isotopically nonexchangeable H in soil. We analyzed 12 topsoil samples from different climate zones (temperate zone, subarctic zone and tropics). The δ2H values of nonexchangeable H in soil ranged from − 75‰ to − 167‰. The δ2H values of nonexchangeable H in soil were highly correlated with predicted average annual δ2H values of local precipitation at the sampling sites (r = 0.89, p < 0.001). The δ2H values of nonexchangeable H in soils from Siberia were up to 80‰ depleted in 2H compared to soils from Central Europe, which directly corresponds to the difference in average annual δ2H values of precipitation from Central Europe and Siberia. Our study supports the hypothesis that the average H isotope composition of local precipitation is the primary control of the isotopic composition of nonexchangeable H in bulk soils. Since δ2H values of nonexchangeable H in SOM and pedogenic clay minerals are both primarily determined by δ2H values of global precipitation, δ2H analyses of bulk soil samples are meaningful irrespective of the precise fractions of SOM and clay minerals in soil.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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