Variability in Radiocarbon Ages of Individual Organic Compounds from Marine Sediments
Open Access
- 8 August 1997
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 277 (5327) , 796-799
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.277.5327.796
Abstract
Organic carbon (OC) from multiple sources can be delivered contemporaneously to aquatic sediments. The influence of different OC inputs on carbon-14–based sediment chronologies is illustrated in the carbon-14 ages of purified, source-specific (biomarker) organic compounds from near-surface sediments underlying two contrasting marine systems, the Black Sea and the Arabian Sea. In the Black Sea, isotopic heterogeneity of n-alkanes indicated that OC was contributed from both fossil and contemporary sources. Compounds reflecting different source inputs to the Arabian Sea exhibit a 10,000-year range in conventional carbon-14 ages. Radiocarbon measurements of biomarkers of marine photoautotrophy enable sediment chronologies to be constructed independent of detrital OC influences.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Radiocarbon in organic compound classes in particulate organic matter and sediment in the deep northeast Pacific OceanGeophysical Research Letters, 1996
- Aliphatic and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in Black Sea sedimentsMarine Chemistry, 1996
- Gas Chromatographic Isolation of Individual Compounds from Complex Matrices for Radiocarbon DatingAnalytical Chemistry, 1996
- The Structure of a New C25 Isoprenoid Alkene Biomarker From Diatomaceous Microbial CommunitiesAustralian Journal of Chemistry, 1993
- Sources of sedimentary lipids deduced from stable carbon-isotope analyses of individual compoundsNature, 1991
- Low organic carbon accumulation rates in Black Sea sedimentsNature, 1991
- Radiocarbon evidence of fossil-carbon cycling in sediments of a nearshore hydrocarbon seepNature, 1990
- OCCURRENCE OF AN ISOPRENOID C25 DIUNASATURATED ALKENE AND HIGH NEUTRAL LIPID CONTENT IN ANTRACTIC SEA‐ICE DIATOM COMMUNITIES1Journal of Phycology, 1988
- Prokaryotic Hopanoids and other Polyterpenoid Sterol SurrogatesAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1987
- Radiocarbon Dating of California Basin SedimentsAAPG Bulletin, 1962