Kenig, Fabien et al. (2003): Branched aliphatic alkanes with quaternary substituted carbon atoms in modern and ancient geologic samples

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 301
Identifier:
2007-127052
georefid

10.1073/pnas.1735581100
doi

Creator:
Kenig, Fabien
University of Illinois, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Chicago, IL, United States
author

Simons, Dirk-Jan H.
University of Hawaii, United States
author

Crich, David
Argonne National Laboratory, United States
author

Cowen, James P.
author

Ventura, Gregory T.
author

Rehbein-Khalily, Tatiana
author

Brown, Todd C.
author

Anderson, Ken B.
author

Identification:
Branched aliphatic alkanes with quaternary substituted carbon atoms in modern and ancient geologic samples
2003
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC, United States
100
22
12554-12558
A pseudohomologous series of branched aliphatic alkanes with a quaternary substituted carbon atom (BAQCs, specifically 2,2-dimethylalkanes and 3,3- and 5,5-diethylalkanes) were identified in warm (65 degrees C) deep-sea hydrothermal waters and Late Cretaceous black shales. 5,5-Diethylalkanes were also observed in modern and Holocene marine shelf sediments and in shales spanning the last 800 million years of the geological record. The carbon number distribution of BAQCs indicates a biological origin. These compounds were observed but not identified in previous studies of 2.0 billion- to 2.2 billion-year-old metasediments and were commonly misidentified in other sediment samples, indicating that BAQCs are widespread in the geological record. The source organisms of BAQCs are unknown, but their paleobiogeographic distribution suggests that they have an affinity for sulfides and might be nonphotosynthetic sulfide oxidizers.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:47.4556
West:-127.4526East: -127.4526
South:47.4556

General geochemistry; Stratigraphy; aliphatic hydrocarbons; alkanes; Archaea; bacteria; biomarkers; black shale; Canada; Cascadia Basin; Cenomanian; Cenozoic; clastic rocks; Cretaceous; diethylalkanes; East Pacific; Eh; Expedition 301; fatty acids; FTIR spectra; global; Holocene; hydrocarbons; infrared spectra; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; Juan de Fuca Ridge; lipids; marine environment; marine sediments; mass spectra; Mesoproterozoic; Mesozoic; modern; Neoproterozoic; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; ODP Site 1026; organic acids; organic compounds; oxidation; Pacific Ocean; Paleoproterozoic; Phanerozoic; Precambrian; Proterozoic; Quaternary; sampling; sea water; sedimentary rocks; sediments; shelf environment; spectra; substitution; sulfides; temperature; Turonian; Upper Cretaceous; upper Precambrian;

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