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  5. Methane clumped isotopes: Progress and potential for a new isotopic tracer
 
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Methane clumped isotopes: Progress and potential for a new isotopic tracer

Author(s)
Douglas, Peter M.J.  
Stolper, Daniel A.  
Eiler, John M.  
Sessions, Alex L.  
Lawson, Michael  
Shuai, Yanhua  
Bishop, Andrew  
Podlaha, Olaf G.  
Ferreira, Alexandre A.  
Santos Neto, Eugenio V.  
Niemann, Martin  
Steen, Arne S.  
Huang, Ling  
Chimiak, Laura  
Valentine, David L.  
Fiebig, Jens  
Luhmann, Andrew J.  
Seyfried, William E.  
Etiope, Giuseppe  
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Sezione Roma2, Roma, Italia  
Schoell, Martin  
Inskeep, William P.  
Moran, James J.  
Kitchen, Nami  
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
6A. Geochimica per l'ambiente
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Journal
Organic Geochemistry  
Issue/vol(year)
/113 (2017)
Pages (printed)
262-282
Date Issued
2017
DOI
10.1016/j.orggeochem.2017.07.016
URI
https://www.earth-prints.org/handle/2122/10757
Abstract
The isotopic composition of methane is of longstanding geochemical interest, with important implications for understanding petroleum systems, atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations, the global carbon cycle, and life in extreme environments. Recent analytical developments focusing on multiply substituted isotopologues (‘clumped isotopes’) are opening a valuable new window into methane geochemistry. When methane forms in internal isotopic equilibrium, clumped isotopes can provide a direct record of formation temperature, making this property particularly valuable for identifying different methane origins. However, it has also become clear that in certain settings methane clumped isotope measurements record kinetic rather than equilibrium isotope effects. Here we present a substantially expanded dataset of methane clumped isotope analyses, and provide a synthesis of the current interpretive framework for this parameter. In general, clumped isotope measurements indicate plausible formation temperatures for abiotic, thermogenic, and microbial methane in many geological environments, which is encouraging for the further development of this measurement as a geothermometer, and as a tracer for the source of natural gas reservoirs and emissions. We also highlight, however, instances where clumped isotope derived temperatures are higher than expected, and discuss possible factors that could distort equilibrium formation temperature signals. In microbial methane from freshwater ecosystems, in particular, clumped isotope values appear to be controlled by kinetic effects, and may ultimately be useful to study methanogen metabolism.
Type
article
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