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PROJECTIONS FOR FUTURE RADIOCARBON CONTENT IN DISSOLVED INORGANIC CARBON IN HARDWATER LAKES: A RETROSPECTIVE APPROACH

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RADIOCARBON
卷 60, 期 3, 页码 791-800

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UNIV ARIZONA DEPT GEOSCIENCES
DOI: 10.1017/RDC.2018.12

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carbon cycle; DIC; Lake Constance; reservoir effect; Suess Effect

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Inland water bodies contain significant amounts of carbon in the form of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) derived from a mixture of modern atmospheric and pre-aged sources, which needs to be considered in radiocarbon-based dating and natural isotope tracer studies. While reservoir effects in hardwater lakes are generally considered to be constant through time, a comparison of recent and historical (DIC)-C-14 data from 2013 and 1969 for Lake Constance reveals that this is not a valid assumption. We hypothesize that changes in atmospheric carbon contributions to lake water DIC have taken place due to anthropogenically forced eutrophication in the 20th century. A return to more oligotrophic conditions in the lake led to reoxygenation and enhanced terrigenous organic matter remineralization, contributing to lake water DIC. Such comparisons using (DIC)-C-14 measurements from different points in time enable nonlinear changes in lake water DIC source and signature to be disentangled from concurrent anthropogenically induced changes in atmospheric C-14. In the future, coeval changes in lake dynamics due to climate change are expected to further perturb these balances. Depending on the scenario, Lake Constance (DIC)-C-14 is projected to decrease from the 2013 measured value of 0.856 Fm to 0.54-0.62 Fm by the end of the century.

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