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1.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 35(20): e9170, 2021 Oct 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34302407

RESUMEN

RATIONALE: The isotopic composition of hydrocarbons trapped in rocks on the microscale (fluid inclusions, mineral grain boundaries, microfractures) can provide powerful information on geological and biological processes but are an analytical challenge due to low concentrations. We present a new approach for the extraction and carbon isotopic analysis of methane (CH4 ) and hydrocarbons in trapped volatiles in crystalline rocks. METHODS: An off-line crusher with cryogenic trapping and a custom-made silica glass U-trap were attached to an external injector port on a continuous flow gas chromatograph/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometer to demonstrate the accuracy, reproducibility, and sensitivity of δ13 C measurements for CH4 . RESULTS: The method can isotopically characterize CH4 in crushed rock samples with concentrations as low as 3.5 × 10-9 mol/g of rock, and both sample and isotopic standards are analyzed with an accuracy and reproducibility of ±0.5‰. High H2 O/CH4 ratios of 98 to 500 have no effect on measured δ13 CCH4 values. The method is successfully applied to natural samples from the north range of Sudbury Basin, Ontario, Canada. The δ13 C isotopic signatures of CH4 trapped microscopically in rock from the north range overlap significantly with that of CH4 contained in larger scale flowing fracture fluids from the same part of the Sudbury Basin, indicating a potential genetic link. CONCLUSIONS: A novel method for δ13 CCH4 analysis was developed for the extraction of nanomole quantities of CH4 trapped microscopically in rocks. The technique has an accuracy and reproducibility comparable to that of on-line crushing techniques but importantly provides the capability of crushing larger rock quantities (up to 100 g). The benefit is improved detection levels for trace hydrocarbon species. Such a capability will be important for future extension of such crushing techniques for measurement of 2 H/1 H for CH4 , clumped isotopologues of CH4 and other trapped volatiles species, such as C2 H6 , C3 H8 , C4 H10 , CO2 and N2 .

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 103(34): 12695-700, 2006 Aug 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16908861

RESUMEN

Understanding of the geochemistry of the chalcophile elements [i.e., Os, Ir, Ru, Pt, Pd (platinum-group elements), and Au, Cu, Ni] has been informed for at least 20 years by the common assumption that when crust-forming partial melts are extracted from the upper mantle, sulfide liquid in the restite sequesters chalcophile elements until the extent of partial melting exceeds approximately 25% and all of the sulfide has been dissolved in silicate melt [Hamlyn, P. R. & Keays, R. R. (1985) Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 49, 1797-1811]. Here we document very high, unfractionated, chalcophile element concentrations in small-degree partial melts from the mantle that cannot be reconciled with the canonical residual sulfide assumption. We show that the observed high, unfractionated platinum-group element concentrations in small-degree partial melts can be attained if the melting takes place at moderately high oxygen fugacity, which will reduce the amount of sulfide due to the formation of sulfate and will also destabilize residual monosulfide solid solution by driving sulfide melts into the spinel-liquid divariant field. Magmas formed at high oxygen fugacity by small degrees of mantle melting can be important agents for the transfer of chalcophile elements from the upper mantle to the crust and may be progenitors of significant ore deposits of Pt, Pd, and Au.

3.
Nature ; 429(6991): 546-8, 2004 Jun 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15175748

RESUMEN

Deformation and melting of the crust during the formation of large impact craters must have been important during the Earth's early evolution, but such processes remain poorly understood. The 1.8-billion-year-old Sudbury structure in Ontario, Canada, is greater than 200 km in diameter and preserves a complete impact section, including shocked basement rocks, an impact melt sheet and fallback material. It has generally been thought that the most voluminous impact melts represent the average composition of the continental crust, but here we show that the melt sheet now preserved as the Sudbury Igneous Complex is derived predominantly from the lower crust. We therefore infer that the hypervelocity impact caused a partial inversion of the compositional layering of the continental crust. Using geochemical data, including platinum-group-element abundances, we also show that the matrix of the overlying clast-laden Onaping Formation represents a mixture of the original surficial sedimentary strata, shock-melted lower crust and the impactor itself.

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