Abstract
Stable hydrogen and oxygen isotopes were analysed in water samples from the River Danube and its tributaries during a longitudinal survey performed in August 2005 on Serbian territory. Danube river water data ranged from−80‰ to−66‰ for δ2H, and from−11.2‰ to−9.3‰ for δ18O with δ values increasing downstream. The isotopic signatures of the adjacent tributaries (the Tisza, the Sava and the Velika Morava) sampled at the locations close to their confluence with the Danube (Titel, Ostružnica and Ljubičevski most, respectively) just about the time of the campaign were enriched (−67‰ and−63‰ for δ2H, and−9.3‰ and−8.9‰ for δ18O) with respect to the Danube water because of their catchment effects. Hydrogen and oxygen stable isotope values were used in combination with measured physico-chemical and biological parameters to trace hydrological and transport processes in these river systems. The mixing relationships between the Danube main stream and its tributaries were estimated using the mass balance for isotopic composition and electrical conductivity as conservative parameters. Evidence of an incomplete mixing process at the Čenta location, 8 km below the confluence of the Tisza river, with its participation of 88% was shown by its oxygen-18 content. The correlations between river water isotope composition and physico-chemical and biological parameters are discussed.
† Revised version of a paper presented at the 9th. Symposium of the European Society for Isotope Research (ESIR), 23 to 28 June 2007, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the Ministry of Sciences and Environmental Pollution for financial support to complete this work under the Project ON142039. The authors are grateful to staff members of the Republic Hydrometeorologcal Service of Serbia for their assistance in collecting samples for isotopic analysis and for providing us with the hydrological and meteorological data. We also thank Stojan Žigon for stable isotope analyses.
Notes
† Revised version of a paper presented at the 9th. Symposium of the European Society for Isotope Research (ESIR), 23 to 28 June 2007, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.