GEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Online ISSN : 1880-5973
Print ISSN : 0016-7002
ISSN-L : 0016-7002
Carbonisotopic difference of saturated long-chain n-fatty acids between a terrestrial and a marine sediment
Hiroshi NaraokaKeita YamadaRyoshi Ishiwatari
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1995 Volume 29 Issue 3 Pages 189-195

Details
Abstract
Stable carbon isotopic compositions of individual n-fatty acids ranging from C20 to C30 in a terrestrial (riverine) and a marine (pelagic) sediment were determined using gas chromatography/isotope ratio monitoring mass spectrometry (GC/IRMS). These fatty acids in a terrestrial sediment at the Ohtsuchi river in northern Honshu Island, Japan, showed δ13C values (from -35 to -32‰ relative to PDB) lighter than that of the total organic carbon (TOC; -26.4‰) by about 6 to 9‰. The δ13C values from a marine sediment in the Pacific Ocean ca. 500 km off the coast of Honshu Island varied from -31 to -26‰, which were also lighter than that of the TOC (-20.5‰) by 6 to 9‰. The δ13C values of n-fatty acids ranging from C20 to C30 in the marine sediment were heavier by about 5 to 6‰ than those at the corresponding carbon numbers in the terrestrial one. Isotopically, the marine n-fatty acids were clearly distinguished from the terrestrial ones. These results suggest that long-chain n-fatty acids in marine sediment were not derived from land higher plant but from marine organisms, although long-chain n-fatty acids (≥C20) in marine sediments have often been used to assess terrestrial material contribution to the ocean.
Content from these authors
© Geochemical Society of Japan
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top