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Depends upon the heavy water vapour concentration in the atmosphere.
Quote from: chiralSPO on 01/06/2017 21:59:29Quote from: jeffreyH on 31/05/2017 17:59:27Depends upon the heavy water vapour concentration in the atmosphere.The heavy water vapor concentration in the atmosphere depends on the temperature. Not the other way around. That is why deuterium content is used to measure temperature indirectly.Are you saying that when temperature increases the lighter hydrogen rises leaving the deuterium at lower levels and so at a greater concentration?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 31/05/2017 17:59:27Depends upon the heavy water vapour concentration in the atmosphere.The heavy water vapor concentration in the atmosphere depends on the temperature. Not the other way around. That is why deuterium content is used to measure temperature indirectly.
So what causes the ratios in the oceans, rivers and lakes to change?
You missed the point. The ratio changes. What causes the ratio to change.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 02/06/2017 21:41:36How does this explain the cycles in the ice cores?The ice in the cores is from compressed snowfall. So you can think of it like sedimentary rock: the earliest snow has become the deepest ice, and the most recent snow became the ice near the top (so this establishes the timeline). Then, because the ice was deposited as snow, we know that the water had become vaporized, redistributed and then fell as snow. Therefore the ratio of the H/D isotopes in a given part of the ice core is reflective of the H/D ratio in the atmosphere at a given point in time, and this serves as an indication of the temperature of the surface water around the globe when the snow formed.
How does this explain the cycles in the ice cores?
If we freeze heavy water it will sink in H2O. As oceans cool there is likely to be less heavy water at the surface. This is just buoyancy. Also there will be less of it available for evaporation.
So then what is it about water vapour as a whole that makes it a greenhouse gas?
Where did I mention spontaneous D2O icebergs? That would be ridiculous.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 03/06/2017 22:29:55Where did I mention spontaneous D2O icebergs? That would be ridiculous.Sorry, that's how I interpreted this:Quote from: jeffreyH on 03/06/2017 14:57:42If we freeze heavy water it will sink in H2O. As oceans cool there is likely to be less heavy water at the surface. This is just buoyancy. Also there will be less of it available for evaporation.I'm glad we agree that D2O icebergs would be ridiculous