Abstract

The linear relationship between two stable water isotopes (δD and δ18O) has been used to examine the physical processes and movements or changes of three water phases (water vapor, liquid water and ice), including deuterium excess. The ordinary least squares (OLS) method has been the most commonly used method to fit the linear relationship between two isotopic compositions of water. However, an alternative method, the total least squares (TLS) method, has been proposed because it considers the presence of errors in the explanatory variable (horizontal axis, δ18O). However, not many studies have examined the differences of the relationship using two stable isotopes between the OLS and TLS for various types of water. In this work, these two methods were compared using isotopic compositions of three types of water (Antarctic snow, water vapor and summer and winter rainfall). Statistically, the slopes and intercepts obtained by the two linear regression methods were not significantly different except for summer rainfall, which has the smallest coefficient of variations (R2). The TLS method produced larger slopes than the OLS method and the degrees of difference between the two methods were greater when the coefficient of variation was lower. In addition, with a Monte Carlo method, we showed that the differences between the two methods increased as the uncertainty increased. Moreover, the results of Bayesian linear regression were consistent with the two linear regressions. Although the TLS method is theoretically more suited to the linear regression for the stable water isotopes than the OLS method is, the application of the widely used OLS method can be recommended in the case of small measurements uncertainties after testing whether the linear parameters, slopes and intercepts, derived from the two methods are statistically significant different.

Highlights

  • Stable isotopic measurements of water are helpful for quantifying global or local distributions of exchange processes between water vapor, liquid water and ice

  • Summary In this work, we quantified the differences in the slopes and intercepts of two stable water isotopes computed by the ordinary least squares (OLS) and total least squares (TLS) methods and investigated whether the magnitude of the differences was affected by the coefficient of variation (R2)

  • As expected, based on the intrinsic mathematical characteristics of the two methods, we found that the TLS method always produced the larger slopes and intercepts than the OLS method for three water types, Antarctic snow/snowmelt, water vapor and summer and winter rainfall

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Summary

Introduction

Stable isotopic measurements of water are helpful for quantifying global or local distributions of exchange processes between water vapor, liquid water and ice. One of the isotopic techniques widely used in isotope hydrology is to investigate the slope of the δD vs δ18O. The evaporation of soil or lake water results in a linear slope less than ~ 8, the slope of the GMWL or LMWL. Craig (1961) presented a key finding concerning the distribution of isotopic ratios in precipitation. He noted that the global isotopic compositions of precipitation (δD and δ18O) are highly correlated and plots along a regression slope of 8, which defines the GMWL.

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