Natural sulfurization of carbohydrates in marine sediments : consequences for the chemical and carbon isotopic composition of sedimentary organic matter
Publication date
2003
Authors
Dongen, B.E. van
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Dissertation
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Carbohydrates make up the largest part of the organic matter in the biosphere and are used by
living organism for many different reasons. They serve, among others, as carbon and energy
source as well as metabolic intermediates. Carbohydrates are generally thought to be
remineralized during early diagenesis in the water column and in the sediment and thus not
preserved in substantial amounts. However, earlier studies have suggested that preservation of
carbohydrates through sulfurization could be possible and may be an important pathway for the
preservation of sedimentary organic matter. In theory, preservation of carbohydrates through
sulfurization would have a significant impact on total organic carbon (TOC) as well as the
carbon isotopic composition of the TOC (8 13CTOc) records and could, for example, explain the
large variations in both records observed in the Upper Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay Formation
(KCF). However, it is still unclear to what extent carbohydrates can be preserved in sedimentary
organic material and what the consequence of a substantial preservation of carbohydrates is for
the chemical composition of the TOC. Its consequences for the 8l3CTOC record are also unclear
since hardly anything is known about the variation in isotopic compositions of carbohydrates in
natural systems. The primary goal of the work described in this thesis is to test the hypothesis
that preservation of carbohydrates through sulfurization may be an important pathway for the
preservation of organic matter and, if so, to determine what the consequences for the TOC and
813CTOC record will be.