Write paper: Dynamic age of water and carbon
Contents
Title
"Dynamic age of water and carbon isotopes in lake-catchment systems" (tentative)
Authors
Chris Duffy, Paul Hanson, Jordan Read, Yolanda Gill, Gopal Bhatt, Lele Shu, Xuan Yu, …...
Abstract
This research focuses on theoretical and experimental aspects of the isotopic “age” of water and carbon in lake-catchment systems. In this context, “age” is defined as the time since the water parcel and environmental tracer entered the system as precipitation. We note that each of our communities have developed an observing system for isotope ratios of carbon, oxygen and hydrogen but with very different science questions. In this research we will test a framework using models and data for defining a unified “isoscape” for the watershed-lake system, forming a richer and more collaborative shared research strategy. Our hypothesis is that the lake-catchment isoscape provides the experimental basis for predicting flow paths, residence times and the relative age of water in space and time, and that understanding these spatiotemporal patterns will provide a deeper understanding of fundamental biogeochemical processes including carbon and nitrogen cycling within the lake-catchment system. There is a wide literature on the use of residence time and relative age distribution of isotopes in environmental systems. Theories have been proposed using tracers for age modeling in ocean ventilation, atmospheric circulation, soil water, stream, groundwater flow, biophysics of vegetation photosynthesis as well as the circulation of blood. We begin this research with a simple model for the age of an environmental tracers in a ecohydrologic setting. Details of the approach can be found in Duffy (2010). The figure below is a simulation for the space-time distribution of isotopic age from the Shale Hills Critical Zone Observatory (Bhatt, 2012).
A useful analogy to understand the concept of “age” comes from population biology (Forester, 1959; Rotenberg, 1972). Consider a random population of individuals (species or particles) being born, dying and migrating. Given a long-term census of the population, the distribution of the size of the population through time and the distribution of ages of the population through time can be evaluated. Other moments may also be useful and can easily be determined from the census given enough data. The important concept to consider here is that there are actually two things we wish to evaluate in our long-term census: the number of individuals in our population through time, and the mean age of the population through time. For dissolved chemical species in water each component is characterized by physical time (clock time) and by the relative time or age since the species entered the system. The relative time for each component has it's own frame of reference particular to the dynamics of the flow system, the transport processes and the interaction with other components in the system.
In the broader context, our goal is to construct a predictive model for the fifth dimension of environmental tracers, the space-time-age distribution of the physical, chemical and biological pathways of the terrestrial environmental systems.
REFERENCES
Duffy, C. J., 2010,
Bhatt, G. 2012
Forester, 1959
Rotenberg, 1972