Abstract

AbstractWe show that climate and topography control the spatial distribution of stable isotope values on the South Island of New Zealand, based on a spatially dense (n = 193) river isotopic survey. Our data show a δ18O minimum in isotope values east of the Southern Alps that demonstrates topographically driven continentality associated with the Southern Alps, which intersect the prevailing, moisture‐laden westerlies. Our data define a South Island surface water line of δ2H = 8.17 (±0.26) × δ18O + 10.57 (±2.04), which is identical within 95% confidence intervals to the global and New Zealand meteoric water lines established from monthly precipitation samples. The observed river δ18O values are strongly correlated with annual temperature range and winter temperature. Strongest correlations are between δ18O and mean minimum winter temperatures (r > 0.7 for June, July, August), with gradients of 0.58–0.66‰ /°C. Based on a multiple regression analysis of δ18O against climate data, we present a river δ18O model and isoscape that demonstrate the control of continentality and moisture source on New Zealand surface water isotope spatial patterns. Model validation against previously published river samples shows skill in predicting river δ18O values (root‐mean‐square error = 0.83), confirming that the spatial variations in river δ18O (and δ2H) are robust to sampling period and reflect continental, precipitation source and temperature effects. Our data suggest that oxygen or hydrogen isotope paleoclimate proxies derived from rivers or open‐system lakes on the South Island should be sensitive to winter temperature.

Highlights

  • Plain Language Summary We investigated the spatial variations in oxygen and hydrogen stable isotopes in rivers on the South Island of New Zealand and show that they are strongly controlled by the presence of the Southern Alps

  • We show that winter temperature and continentality are the dominant control on New Zealand South Island river oxygen isotope values, and they result in minimum values in the lee of the highest portion of the Southern Alps

  • The highest South Island δ18O values occur along the upwind slopes of catchments that drain toward the Tasman Sea, while the lowest values are from interior locations in the lee of the highest Southern Alps peaks

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Summary

Introduction

Temporal and spatial variations in precipitation isotope values encode climatic processes that reveal atmospheric dynamics, influence of orographic barriers, and temperature controls. In mid- to high-latitude regions, the δ18O and δ2H values of meteoric waters are strongly related to temperature, which controls both the equilibrium fractionation between vapor and condensate (Fricke & O'Neill, 1999; Rozanski et al, 1993), and the amount of heavy isotope distillation associated with air mass rainout along an ocean to continent cooling path. Stable isotope values vary with air mass evolution within storms and with orographic rainout (Lachniet et al, 2016; Poage & Chamberlain, 2001; Rowley & Garzione, 2007; Winnick et al, 2014). Stable isotopic changes relating to moisture sources arriving at a location are strongly related to subsequent weather system history and regional geography. The temperature control on meteoric water isotope

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