Isotopic inferences of ancient biochemistries - Carbon, sulfur, hydrogen, and nitrogenIn processes of biological incorporation and subsequent biochemical processing sizable isotope effects occur as a result of both thermodynamic and kinetic fractionations which take place during metabolic and biosynthetic reactions. In this chapter a review is provided of earlier work and recent studies on isotope fractionations in the biogeochemical cycles of carbon, sulfur, hydrogen, and nitrogen. Attention is given to the biochemistry of carbon isotope fractionation, carbon isotope fractionation in extant plants and microorganisms, isotope fractionation in the terrestrial carbon cycle, the effects of diagenesis and metamorphism on the isotopic composition of sedimentary carbon, the isotopic composition of sedimentary carbon through time, implications of the sedimentary carbon isotope record, the biochemistry of sulfur isotope fractionation, pathways of the biogeochemical cycle of nitrogen, and the D/H ratio in naturally occurring materials.
Document ID
19840060271
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Schidlowski, M. (Max-Planck-Institut fuer Chemie Mainz, Germany)
Hayes, J. M. (Indiana University Bloomington, IN, United States)
Kaplan, I. R. (California, University Los Angeles, CA, United States)