High spatial resolution prediction of tritium (H) in contemporary global precipitation.

Stefan Terzer-Wassmuth, Luis J Araguás-Araguás, Lorenzo Copia, Leonard I Wassenaar
Author Information
  1. Stefan Terzer-Wassmuth: Isotope Hydrology Section, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna International Centre, 1400, Vienna, Austria. s.terzer@iaea.org.
  2. Luis J Araguás-Araguás: Isotope Hydrology Section, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna International Centre, 1400, Vienna, Austria.
  3. Lorenzo Copia: Isotope Hydrology Section, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna International Centre, 1400, Vienna, Austria.
  4. Leonard I Wassenaar: Isotope Hydrology Section, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna International Centre, 1400, Vienna, Austria.

Abstract

Tritium (H) in Earth's precipitation is vigilantly monitored since historical nuclear bomb tests because of radiological protection considerations and its invaluable role as a tracer of the global water cycle in quantifying surface, groundwater, and oceanic fluxes. For hydrological applications, accurate knowledge of H in contemporary local precipitation is prerequisite for dating of critical zone water and calibrating hydrogeologic transport and groundwater protection models. However, local tritium input in precipitation is hard to constrain due to few H observation sites. We present new high-spatial resolution global prediction maps of multi-year mean H in contemporary "post-bomb" (2008-2018) precipitation by using a robust regression model based on environmental and geospatial covariates. The model accurately predicted the mean annual H in precipitation, which allowed us to produce global H input maps for applications in hydrological and climate modelling. The spatial patterns revealed natural H in contemporary precipitation sufficient for practical hydrological applications (1-25 TU) but variable across continental regions and higher latitudes due to cumulative influences of cyclical neutron fluxes, stratospheric inputs, and distance from tropospheric moisture sources. The new H maps provide a foundational resource for improved calibration of groundwater flow models and critical zone vulnerability assessment and provides an operational baseline for quantifying the potential impact of future anthropogenic nuclear activities and hydroclimatic changes.

References

  1. Isotopes Environ Health Stud. 2009 Jun;45(2):96-117 [PMID: 20183224]
  2. Ground Water. 2012 Jan-Feb;50(1):87-93 [PMID: 21361928]
  3. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom. 2020 Sep 15;34(17):e8832 [PMID: 32415697]

MeSH Term

Groundwater
Hydrology
Radiation Monitoring
Tritium
Water Pollutants, Radioactive

Chemicals

Water Pollutants, Radioactive
Tritium

Word Cloud

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