Unique distributions of hydrocarbons and sulphur compounds released by flash pyrolysis from the fossilised alga Gloeocapsomorpha prisca, a major constituent in one of four Ordovician kerogens
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Publication date
1991
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Sinninghe Damsté, J.S.
Douglas, A.G.
Fowler, M.G.
Eglinton, T.I.
Leeuw. J.W. de
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Abstract
Kerogens isolated from four rocks of Ordovician age from North America have been analysed by combined pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to compare and contrast the type and distribution of sulphur-containing compounds and aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons present in the pyrolysates.
When pyrolysed, all of the kerogens released several series of heterocyclic sulphur compounds including alkylthiophenes, alkylthiolanes, alkylthianes and alkylbenzothiophenes together with n-alkanes, n-alklenes and alkylcyclohexanes as well as alkyl-substituted benzenes and naphthalenes. One of the kerogens, isolated from the Guttenberg oil rock, consisted predominantly of the alga Gloeocapsomorpha prisca, which produced sulphur compounds and hydrocarbons with fingerprint pyrograms that were different from those of the other three kerogens. The data provide prima facie evidence that these distributions may act as pseudo “biological markers” for this species of alga, namely that unsaturated kerogen moieties available for the uptake of sulphur, or which can cyclise to form hydrocarbons, distinguish Gloeocapsomorpha prisca from the contributing organisms of the other kerogens analysed.