17 research outputs found

    Exceptional preservation of palaeozoic steroids in a diagenetic continuum

    Get PDF
    The occurrence of intact sterols has been restricted to immature Cretaceous (~125 Ma) sediments with one report from the Late Jurassic (~165 Ma). Here we report the oldest occurrence of intact sterols in a Crustacean fossil preserved for ca. 380 Ma within a Devonian concretion. The exceptional preservation of the biomass is attributed to microbially induced carbonate encapsulation, preventing full decomposition and transformation thus extending sterol occurrences in the geosphere by 250 Ma. A suite of diagenetic transformation products of sterols was also identified in the concretion, demonstrating the remarkable coexistence of biomolecules and geomolecules in the same sample. Most importantly the original biolipids were found to be the most abundant steroids in the sample. We attribute the coexistence of steroids in a diagenetic continuum-ranging from stenols to triaromatic steroids-to microbially mediated eogenetic processes

    The variable influence of dispersant on degradation of oil hydrocarbons in subarctic deep-sea sediments at low temperatures (0-5 °C)

    Get PDF
    The microbial degradation of petroleum hydrocarbons at low temperatures was investigated in subarctic deep-sea sediments in th e Faroe Shetland Channel (FSC). The effect of the marine oil dispersant, Superdispersant 25 on hydrocarbon degradation was also examined. Sediments collected at 500 and 1000 m depth were spiked with a model oil containing 20 hydrocarbons and incubated at ambient temperature (5 and 0 °C, respectively) with and without marine dispersant. Treatment of sediments with hydrocarbons resulted in the enrichment of Gammaproteobacteria, and specifically the genera Pseudoalteromonas, Pseudomonas, Halomonas, and Cobetia. Hydrocarbon degradation was faster at 5 °C (500 m) with 65-89% of each component degraded after 50 days compared to 0-47% degradation at 0 °C (1000 m), where the aromatic hydrocarbons fluoranthene, anthracene, and Dibenzothiophene showed no degradation. Dispersant significantly increased the rate of degradation at 1000 m, but had no effect at 500 m. There was no statistically significant effect of Superdispersant 25 on the bacterial community structure at either station. These results show that the indigenous bacterial community in the FSC has the capacity to mitigate some of the effects of a potential oil spill, however, the effect of dispersant is ambiguous and further research is needed to understand the implications of its use

    A Summary of Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 67. Shipboard Results From the Mid-America Trench Transect off Guatemala

    No full text
    The Middle America Trench off Guatemala was transected by 24-channel seismic-reflection surveys, seismic-refraction surveys, and drilling with the Glomar Challanger . The drilling was doneat three sites on the oceanic Cocos plate and four sites on the Caribbean plate. These plates converge at about 10 cm/yr as indicated by global plate reconstruction. On the oceanic Cocos plate a basal chalk sequence of lower and middle Miocene age is overlain by a thin interval of abyssal clay. In contrast is the Cretaceous to lower Miocene claystone sequence recovered only at a site 3 km landward of the trench axis where drilling penetrated the hemipelagic slope deposits. A large amount of sediment along with ocean crust has been subducted during the present (Miocene to Quaternary) episode of subduction, and parts of the continental framework may have been subducted as well. No current tectonic model satisfactorily explains the surprising occurrence of Cretaceous to Miocene claystone at the foot of the continent

    The nature and fate of natural resins in the geosphere. Part X.<sup>† </sup>Structural characteristics of the macromolecular constituents of modern Dammar resin and Class II ambers

    Get PDF
    <p/> <p>As part of a larger study of the structure and behavior of polyterpenoids in sedimentary systems, the structural characteristics of the macromolecular constituents of Dammar resin and a related Class II amber have been reinvestigated. The conclusions drawn from these analyses are inconsistent with the current widely held "polycadinene" model for the macromolecular structure of these materials. Double bond characteristics observed by one and two dimensional NMR spectroscopy do not match those in the proposed "polycadinene" structure. Based on these observations it is suggested that the proposed "polycadinene" structure for these materials is inadequate and requires revision. Elemental and NMR data also suggest a significant contribution from functionalized monomers.</p
    corecore