P. Amiotte-suchet et al., delta C-13 pattern of dissolved inorganic carbon in a small granitic catchment: the Strengbach case study (Vosges mountains, France), CHEM GEOL, 159(1-4), 1999, pp. 129-145
The transfers and origins of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) were studied
for a year in a soil-spring-stream system in the Strengbach catchment, Vosg
es mountains, France. This 80 ha experimental research basin is located on
the eastern side of the mountains, at an altitude ranging from 883 to 1146
m.a.s.l. and is mainly covered by spruce (80%). Brown acid and podzolic soi
ls developed on a granitic basement, and, as a result, the DIC originates s
olely from CO, generated by oxidation of soil organic matter. The (delta(13
)C(DIC)) in catchment waters is highly variable, from about -22 parts per t
housand in the springs and piezometers to about - 12 parts per thousand in
the stream at the outlet of the catchment. In the springs, pronounced seaso
nal variations of delta(13)C(DIC) exist, with the DIC in isotopic equilibri
um with the soil CO2 that has estimated delta(13)C of about - 24 parts per
thousand in winter and -20 parts per thousand in summer. These seasonal var
iations reflect an isotopic fractionation that seems only induced by molecu
lar diffusion of soil CO2 in summer. In stream water, seasonal variations a
re small and the relatively heavy DIC (-12 parts per thousand on average) i
s a result of isotopic equilibration of the aqueous CO2 with atmospheric CO
2. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.