Nonprevalence of biochemical fossils in kerogen from pre-Phanerozoic sediments
AUTOR(ES)
Leventhal, Joel
RESUMO
Evidence of biochemical and geochemical evolution was sought in insoluble carbonaceous matter from 30 selected pre-Phanerozoic sediments ranging in age from about 3.8 to about 0.7 × 109 years. The carbon isotope ratios observed were in the range of -20 to -32 per mil with reference to the Peedee belemnite standard, similar to those previously reported. No systematic trends are obvious to us. Stepwise pyrolysis-gas-chromatography showed only molecules with fewer than 8 carbon atoms at the level of sensitivity of 10-9 g of organics in a 10 mg rock sample. Carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen analyses showed noncarbonate carbon from less than 0.1% to more than 3%, with very small amounts of N. The H/C (atomic) ratios on HCl-leached and HF-treated samples were generally less than 0.3. Evidence of low pyrolysis yields (micro-analysis) and low H/C atomic ratios (macro-analysis) implies that the carbonaceous solids in even the least metamorphosed of these ancient sediments have evolved far toward amorphous carbon or graphite and do not yield useful “biochemical fossils.”
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=388797Documentos Relacionados
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