%0 Journal article %A Strobel, Paul %A Struck, Julian %A Bazarradnaa, Enkhtuya %A Zech, Michael %A Zech, Roland %A Bliedtner, Marcel %T Precipitation and Lake Water Evaporation Recorded by Terrestrial and Aquatic n‐Alkane δ2H Isotopes in Lake Khar Nuur, Mongolia %R 10.1029/2021GC010234 %J Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems %V 23 %N 2 %I %X The compound‐specific hydrogen isotopic composition (δ2H) of n‐alkanes is a valuable proxy to investigate hydrological conditions in lake sediments. While terrestrial n‐alkanes reflect the isotopic signal of the local precipitation, aquatic n‐alkanes incorporate the isotopic signal of the lake's water, which can be strongly modulated by evaporative enrichment. So far, the spatial distribution of the terrestrial and aquatic δ2H signal within lakes have not systematically been investigated. Here, we present compound‐specific δ2H results of terrestrial (δ2HC31) and aquatic (δ2HC23) n‐alkanes of surface sediment samples from Lake Khar Nuur, a semi‐arid and high‐altitude lake in the Mongolian Altai, and additionally investigate the δ2H signal of topsoils from the catchment. Our results show that the majority of the n‐alkane δ2H values from the catchment topsoils correspond well with modeled local growing season precipitation (JJAS). However, few samples in the northern catchment show more positive δ2H values possibly due to increased evapo(transpi)ration by southward exposition and shallower soils there. The only small variability of δ2HC31 in the surface sediments is in the range of most topsoils δ2H from the catchment, and thus, well reflects local growing season precipitation. δ2HC23 in surface sediment samples from the central and deepest parts of the lake, that is, the lake's sediment accumulation zones, shows distinctly more positive δ2HC23 values due to evaporative lake water enrichment. Consequently, Δaq‐terr, which is the isotopic offset between δ2HC23 and δ2HC31, indicates distinct lake water enrichment in the lake's accumulation zones and is a valuable proxy to investigate past hydrological changes. %U http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/10004 %~ FID GEO-LEO e-docs