Fractionation of Carbon Isotopes Between C-O-H Fluids and Melts in High Temperature Systems - Experimental Developments and Outlook

Author(s):  
Paul Petschnig ◽  
Nico Kueter ◽  
Max Schmidt

<p>Whether in gases or fluids, as solid or liquid carbonates, dissolved in magma or precipitated in its elemental form, carbon is present in every domain on Earth. The pathways of carbon across atmospheric-, surface-, subduction- and deeper reservoirs of our planet are complex, but can be illuminated by tracing stable carbon isotope ratios. Carbonates take a key role in connecting the surface to the deep carbon cycle. At moderate temperatures, carbon compounds dissolve in fluids, above 1000 °C, carbonates dissolve in or form melts and mobilize carbon inside the Earth. Towards the crust, carbon compounds tend to be oxidized (e.g. CO<sub>2</sub>, CO<sub>3</sub><sup>2-</sup>) while in the deeper mantle (> 6-8 GPa), reduced states are dominant and cause carbonate reduction to CH<sub>4</sub>, FeC or C dissolved in metal, graphite or diamond.<sup>[1]</sup></p><p>Recent experimental studies show large carbon isotope fractions at temperatures relevant for the mantle and early Earth environments (i.e. magma ocean surfaces). High temperature equilibrium fractionations have been constrained for CH<sub>4</sub>-CO<sub>2</sub>-CO<sup>[2]</sup>, carbonate - graphite<sup>[3]</sup>, and FeC - graphite<sup>[4] </sup>systems, most pairs amounting to a few ‰ at 1000 <sup>o</sup>C. The recognition of kinetic carbon isotope fractionation during elemental carbon precipitation from C-O-H fluids revealed an unexpected high-temperature fractionation mechanism of ~5 ‰ for lower crust and mantle temperatures<sup>[5]</sup>. In this light, carbon isotope fractionation may yield surprises in other experimentally underexplored processes. </p><p>We present internally consistent experimental data on high temperature carbon isotope fractionation between carbonate or silicate melts, carbonate, C-O-H-fluids, carbide and graphite. Our results suggest that at high temperatures (>1000 °C) the bonding environment of CO<sub>3</sub>-groups (i.e. either in depolymerized silicate- or carbonate melt, in which carbon is anionic CO<sub>3</sub><sup>2-</sup>, or as calcite) causes no resolvable differences leading to a universal ∆<sup>13</sup>C (CO<sub>2</sub> -CO<sub>3</sub><sup>2-</sup>) fractionation function. Similarly, we suggest that granitic melts with all carbon as molecular CO<sub>2</sub>will show no isotope fractionation with an oxidized high temperature fluid. We further discuss challenges of experimental setups under reducing fO<sub>2</sub>conditions and the intent of equilibrating silicate melt with reduced C-O-H-fluids, which is experimentally unconstrained and required to understand on one hand the magmatic outgassing of the Earth and how to reconstruct the source isotope composition, on the other hand in a magma-ocean setting, where reduced species are key for the evolution of primitive carbon reservoirs and their isotopic ratios (i.e. mantle carbon).</p><p> </p><p><em><sup><span>[1] </span></sup><span>Rohrbach, A., Schmidt, M. (2011). Nature 472, 209–212.<sup>[2] </sup>Kueter, N., Schmidt, M. W., Lilley M. D., Bernasconi, S.M. (2019b). EPSL 506, p.64-75. <sup>[3] </sup>Kueter, N., Lilley, M.D., Schmidt, M.W., Bernasconi, S.M. (2019a). </span><span>GCA253, 290–306. <sup>[4] </sup>Satish-Kumar, M., So, H., Yoshino, T., Kato, M., Hiroi, Y. (2011). </span><span>EPLS 310, 340–348. <sup>[5]</sup>Kueter, N., Schmidt, M. W., Lilley M. D., Bernasconi, S.M. (2020). EPSL 529,</span><span>115848</span></em></p><p> </p>

2003 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 871-876 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matt Sponheimer ◽  
Todd Robinson ◽  
Linda Ayliffe ◽  
Ben Passey ◽  
Beverly Roeder ◽  
...  

The carbon-isotope composition of hair and feces offers a glimpse into the diets of mammalian herbivores. It is particularly useful for determining the relative consumption of browse and graze in tropical environments, as these foods have strongly divergent carbon-isotope compositions. Fecal δ13C values reflect the last few days consumption, whereas hair provides longer term dietary information. Previous studies have shown, however, that some fractionation occurs between dietary δ13C values and those of hair and feces. Accurate dietary reconstruction requires an understanding of these fractionations, but few controlled-feeding studies have been undertaken to investigate these fractionations in any mammalian taxa, fewer still in large mammalian herbivores. Here, we present data from the first study of carbon-isotope fractionation between diet, hair, and feces in multiple herbivore taxa. All taxa were fed pure alfalfa (Medicago sativa) diets for a minimum period of 6 months, at which point recently grown hair was shaved and analyzed for carbon isotopes. The mean observed diet–hair fractionation was +3.2‰, with a range of +2.7 to +3.5‰. We also examined diet–feces fractionation for herbivores on alfalfa and bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon) feeds. The mean diet–feces fractionation for both diets was –0.8‰, with less fractionation for alfalfa (–0.6‰) than bermudagrass (–1.0‰). Fecal carbon turnover also varies greatly between taxa. When diets were switched, horse (Equus caballus) feces reflected the new diet within 60 h, but alpaca (Lama pacos) feces did not equilibrate with the new diet for nearly 200 h. Thus, fecal carbon isotopes provide far greater dietary resolution for hindgut-fermenting horses than foregut-fermenting alpacas.


2007 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 692 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur Gessler ◽  
Claudia Keitel ◽  
Naomi Kodama ◽  
Christopher Weston ◽  
Anthony J. Winters ◽  
...  

Post-photosynthetic carbon isotope fractionation might alter the isotopic signal imprinted on organic matter (OM) during primary carbon fixation by Rubisco. To characterise the influence of post-photosynthetic processes, we investigated the effect of starch storage and remobilisation on the stable carbon isotope signature (δ13C) of different carbon pools in the Eucalyptus delegatensis R. T. Baker leaf and the potential carbon isotope fractionation associated with phloem transport and respiration. Twig phloem exudate and leaf water-soluble OM showed diel variations in δ13C of up to 2.5 and 2‰, respectively, with 13C enrichment during the night and depletion during the day. Damped diel variation was also evident in bulk lipids of the leaf and in the leaf wax fraction. δ13C of nocturnal phloem exudate OM corresponded with the δ13C of carbon released from starch. There was no change in δ13C of phloem carbon along the trunk. CO2 emitted from trunks and roots was 13C enriched compared with the potential organic substrate, and depleted compared with soil-emitted CO2. The results are consistent with transitory starch accumulation and remobilisation governing the diel rhythm of δ13C in phloem-transported OM and fragmentation fractionation occurring during respiration. When using δ13C of OM or CO2 for assessing ecosystem processes or plant reactions towards environmental constraints, post-photosynthetic discrimination should be considered.


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