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This study identifies dominant moisture sources, develop an isotope-based framework for characterizing precipitation across a transboundary basin, and evaluate hydrological processes and anthropogenic influences using long-term water isotope records from the lower Red River system of Vietnam. Bi-monthly to monthly δ18O and δ2H measurements of rain and river water were collected from Feb 2018 to Jun 2024. Strong rainfall–isotope relationships were observed, with d-excess values of 8–12 ‰ and dominant moisture contributions from the western equatorial Pacific. Isotope-altitude–continental–amount relationships were used to generate time series for unmonitored sub-basins. River water isotope seasonality agreed with GNIR data at similar latitudes but differed from the Mekong River due to contrasting latitudinal extent and moisture sources. Three river-water sources groups were identified: delta-origin, upstream inflow, and seawater-mixed. Enhanced evaporation, seawater intrusion, and increasing groundwater discharge due to anthropogenic activities are evident. d-excess is a robust indicator of seasonal evaporation in regulated and wetland-rich basins.
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Nho Lan Nguyen
Vietnam Atomic Energy Instiute
Thu Nga Do
Electric Power University
Christine Stumpp
Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment
Hydrological Sciences Journal
Utrecht University
Newcastle University
Netherlands Institute of Ecology
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Nguyen et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10500ed478ddac0ffcae7b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/02626667.2026.2669190
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