Sulfurised carbohydrates: An important sedimentary sink for organic carbon?
Publication date
1998
Authors
Sinninghe Damsté, J.S.
Kok, M.D.
Koster, J.
Schouten, S.
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Article
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Abstract
In contrast to the general belief that carbohydrate carbon (CCHO) is preferentially degraded and is not extensively preserved in the sedimentary record, it is shown here that CCHO forms a large fraction of the organic matter (OM) of the total organic carbon (TOC)-rich upper Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay Formation as a result of early diagenetic sulfurization, a previously unrecognized pathway of OM preservation. This is evident from both changes in the molecular composition of the insoluble OM and from 13CTOC shifts of 6 with varying CCHO contents. Furthermore, experiments simulating the natural sulfurization of the CCHO-rich alga Phaeocystis spp. demonstrated that sulfurization can indeed lead to a substantial preservation of CCHO with a molecular fingerprint identical to that of the Kimmeridge Clay and many other Recent and ancient marine OM-rich sediments. These results imply that preservation of CCHO can exert a fundamental control on 13CTOC in OM-rich sediments, complicating the interpretation of 13CTOC records with regard to estimating terrestrial versus aquatic OM fractions, reconstruction of past atmospheric CO2 levels and global carbon budget models.