In this paper, we investigate the backscattering depolarization of linearly and circularly polarized laser sources propagating in dense water fogs. We limit our investigation to a simple case where an active LiDAR system is pointed toward a white depolarizing Lambertian solid target. The receiver captures the reflected signal in the orthogonal channel so as to remove most of the backscattering from the water fog. It is shown that in the studied cases, a circularly polarized signal is depolarized faster than a linearly polarized signal and thus produces less contrast. We show that in the cases that can be described by the small angle approximation, the Rubenson degree of polarization (DoP) of a circularly polarized beam can be predicted by the DoP of a linearly polarized beam as DoPcir=2DoPlin-1, even for low-order multiple scattering events. In these conditions, since the linear DoP is always stronger, the contrast is expected to be better in linear polarization for ideal depolarizing targets.