Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9522452 | Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2005 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Reevaluation of modern precipitation, temperature, and isotope data permits reconciliation of previous disparate values for the correlation between δ18O of modern precipitation and surface temperature. Past analysis has used the mean surface temperature over the time interval of sample collection (e.g., mean weekly, monthly, or annual temperature) to calculate temperature coefficients, and different approaches at mid-latitudes yield different temperature coefficients (Îδ18O/ÎT): spatial correlations among geographically distinct sites yield â¼0.55â°/K; seasonal variations at single sites yield 0.2-0.4â°/K; and 12 month running averages yield 0.5-1â°/K. However, there are systematic differences in temperature during precipitation events vs. time-averaged surface temperature means. Correction for this bias using hourly weather and monthly isotope data from U.S. sites yields a single value of â¼0.55â°/K for all three approaches. Revised temperature coefficients based on surface observations are also commensurate with coefficients obtained using cloud base temperatures and with theoretical distillation models (0.5-0.7â°/K). These coefficients provide a consistent basis for validation of general circulation models that incorporate stable isotopes of precipitation, and for comparison to independent estimators of the isotopic response to climate change.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
Matthew J. Kohn, Jeffrey M. Welker,