The Strontium Isotopic Composition in Glendonites of the Middle Jurassic in Northern Siberia

2018 ◽  
Vol 482 (1) ◽  
pp. 1168-1172 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Rogov ◽  
A. B. Kuznetsov ◽  
G. V. Konstantinova ◽  
T. L. Turchenko
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prokushkin Anatoly ◽  
Novenko Elena ◽  
Kupryanov Dmitry ◽  
Serikov Sergey

<p>Palsa peatlands are a significant carbon pool in Northern hemisphere which is subjected to change due to accelerated permafrost thaw and peat decomposition with progressing global warming. On the other hand, peat deposits of palsas serve as an important conduit of information about variability of environment conditions in the past millennia and respective vegetation changes. In our study we applied the multi-proxy record to distinguish variation in hydrothermal regimes of palsa peatland in Northern Siberia and to trace the likely diagenetic alteration of accumulated peat.</p><p>The study site is located 10 km North-East of Igarka settlement (67<sup>o</sup>31’ N, 86<sup>o</sup>38’E) within the area underlain discontinuous permafrost. The peat core was obtained in the central intact part of elevated (ca. > 3.5 m above surrounding hollows) dry hummock. The active layer, thawed seasonally layer, at the coring site was about 0.6 m. The entire depth of peat deposit was 8.6 m, but interrupted with several relatively thin (0.1-0.2 m) ice-rich lenses. Thawed and frozen peat samples of 0.5-5.0 cm thickness (mean = 2.8 cm) were collected at 2.5-12.0 cm step (mean =5.4 cm) depending on the amount of peat material. Collected samples (n = 160) after drying at 60<sup>o</sup>C for 48 h were subjected to the analysis for C and N content, stable isotopic composition of C and N. These measurements will further accompany radiocarbon dating, loss on ignition, plant macrofossil and macro charcoal analyses.</p><p>The analyzed 8.6 m deep peat core demonstrated the large variation of C (17.3-54.7%) and N (0.37-3.26 %) contents as well as C:N ratios (14-134). The isotopic depth profile was in the range from -24.51 to -34.31 ‰ for d<sup>13</sup>C and from -1.77 to 6.96 ‰ for d<sup>15</sup>N. The highest enrichment in <sup>15</sup>N (2.69±1.60 ‰ d<sup>15</sup>N) was found in seasonally thawed layer (≤0.6 m). A layer close to the bottom (6.9-8.3 m) contained peat the most depleted by <sup>13</sup>C (<-30 ‰ d<sup>13</sup>C). Meanwhile, along the peat profile depth we detected significant fluctuations in these parameters suggesting the different periods with specific environmental conditions.</p><p>Further combined with radiocarbon dating and plant macrofossil analyses we will attempt to capture the changes occurred during the past epochs in an input matter (vegetation changes and/or its productivity), decomposition rates as well as hydrothermal regimes and permafrost processes like aggradation (e.g. hummock uplift and cryoturbation) and degradation (e.g. hummock collapse, shifts from minerotrophic to ombrotrohic conditions and vice versa).</p><p>This work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation, project № 20-17-00043.</p>


Georesursy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 110-119
Author(s):  
Houqiang Yang ◽  
Elena V. Soboleva

Within the eastern part of the Fukang depression, the main productive series are confined to the Permian and Jurassic oil and gas complexes (OGC), in which the Middle Permian and Lower-Middle Jurassic oil and gas source rocks (OGSRs) are distinguished. The article discusses in detail the oil and gas source characteristics of the Middle Permian and Lower-Middle Jurassic rocks, the molecular composition of oils and bitumoids from the OGSRs, and also interprets the characteristics of the biomarkers in them from the standpoint of the sedimentary-migration theory of oil generation. An attempt is made to explain the reasons for the difference in the properties and composition of oils from different OGCs. It is shown that the composition of hydrocarbon fluids of deposits is determined not only by the geological and geochemical conditions of sedimentation of oil and gas source deposits, but also associated with migration processes and subsequent secondary changes in the accumulation. In terms of composition, three groups of oils were identified: Permian and Jurassic heavy oils with a light carbon isotopic composition and the presence of β-carotene and gammacerane, they underwent different degrees of biodegradation, which depended on the geological conditions of the deposits; Permian medium oils in density (0.84 and 0.87 g/cm3), the composition of biomarkers of which is very close to that of the first group, and Jurassic light oils with a high content of solid paraffins and a heavier carbon isotopic composition, almost do not contain β-carotene and gammacerane concentrations are low.


2001 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 335-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich Henn ◽  
Jaroslav Hyršl ◽  
Claudio C. Milisenda
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document