Volatile organic compounds in Quaternary sediments |
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Authors: | J. M. Hunt J. K. Whelan |
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Affiliation: | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | The distribution of volatile organic compounds in surface sediments varies widely with the depositional environment. Oxygen and sulfur compounds, alkenes and arenes, are more abundant than alkanes in strongly reducing sediments such as those from around Walvis Bay, West Africa. Among the compounds identified by GC-MS were toluene, benzene, 2-methyl-2-butene, 3,5-dimethylcyclopentene, 3-menthylfuran, 3-methylfuran, 2-methylbutanol, 3-methylbutanol, 3-pentanone, 2-methylthiophene, 3-methylthiophene and dimethylsulfide. Some of these compounds have the isoprene carbon skeleton.In a less reducing environment such as the Arabian Sea-Persian Gulf area, a more diverse alkene assemblage was observed including ethylene, propylene, pentenes, hexenes, cyclohexene, methylpentenes and dimethylcyclopentenes. Also, the sediments contained a few very specific alkane structures. The gem-dimethyl hydrocarbons (neopentane, neohexane, and neoheptane) were dominant among the branched hydrocarbons. The high concentration of volatile alkenes and oxygen and sulfur compounds is not observed in deep sea drilling samples at depths greater than about 100 m. |
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