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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Mexico
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San Luis Potosi Mexico (1)
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South America
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Brazil (1)
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Venezuela (1)
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United States
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Nevada (1)
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commodities
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bitumens (1)
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petroleum
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natural gas (2)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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C-13/C-12 (4)
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hydrogen
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D/H (2)
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isotope ratios (4)
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isotopes
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (4)
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D/H (2)
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N-15/N-14 (1)
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O-17/O-16 (1)
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O-18/O-16 (3)
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S-33/S-32 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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S-36 (1)
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nitrogen
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N-15/N-14 (1)
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oxygen
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O-17/O-16 (1)
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O-18/O-16 (3)
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sulfur
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S-33/S-32 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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S-36 (1)
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fossils
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Invertebrata
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geochronology methods
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Mesozoic
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carbonates
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phosphates
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Primary terms
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carbon
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diagenesis (2)
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geochemistry (2)
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geochronology (1)
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hydrogen
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D/H (2)
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Invertebrata
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Brachiopoda (1)
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Echinodermata
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Crinozoa
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Crinoidea (1)
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isotopes
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (4)
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D/H (2)
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N-15/N-14 (1)
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O-17/O-16 (1)
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O-18/O-16 (3)
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S-33/S-32 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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S-36 (1)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous (1)
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Mexico
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San Luis Potosi Mexico (1)
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nitrogen
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N-15/N-14 (1)
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oxygen
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O-17/O-16 (1)
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O-18/O-16 (3)
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Paleozoic
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Bird Spring Formation (1)
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Carboniferous (1)
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Permian (1)
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petroleum
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natural gas (2)
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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limestone (1)
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South America
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Brazil (1)
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Venezuela (1)
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sulfur
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S-33/S-32 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (1)
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S-36 (1)
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United States
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Nevada (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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limestone (1)
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The utility of methane clumped isotopes to constrain the origins of methane in natural gas accumulations
Abstract: Methane clumped-isotope compositions provide a new approach to understanding the formational conditions of methane from both biogenic and thermogenic sources. Under some conditions, these compositions can be used to reconstruct the formational temperatures of the gas, and this capability can be applied to common subsets of both biogenic and thermogenic systems. Additionally, there are examples in which clumped-isotope compositions do not reflect gas-formation temperatures but instead mixing effects and kinetic phenomena; such kinetic effects also occur in common and recognizable subtypes of biogenic and thermogenic gases. Here we review the use of methane clumped-isotope measurements for understanding the origin of methane in the subsurface. We review methane clumped-isotope measurements from numerous biogenic and thermogenic natural gas reservoirs. We then place these measurements in the context of common frameworks for identifying the formational conditions of methane including the use of methane δ 13 C and δD values and C 1 /C 2–3 ratios. Finally, we propose a framework for how methane clumped isotopes can be used to identify the origin of methane accumulations.
The isotopic structures of geological organic compounds
Abstract: Organic compounds are ubiquitous in the Earth’s surface, sediments and many rocks, and preserve records of geological, geochemical and biological history; they are also critical natural resources and major environmental pollutants. The naturally occurring stable isotopes of volatile elements (D, 13 C, 15 N, 17,18 O, 33,34,36 S) provide one way of studying the origin, evolution and migration of geological organic compounds. The study of bulk stable isotope compositions (i.e. averaged across all possible molecular isotopic forms) is well established and widely practised, but frequently results in non-unique interpretations. Increasingly, researchers are reading the organic isotopic record with greater depth and specificity by characterizing stable isotope ‘structures’ – the proportions of site-specific and multiply substituted isotopologues that contribute to the total rare-isotope inventory of each compound. Most of the technologies for measuring stable isotope structures of organic molecules have been only recently developed and to date have been applied only in an exploratory way. Nevertheless, recent advances have demonstrated that molecular isotopic structures provide distinctive records of biosynthetic origins, conditions and mechanisms of chemical transformation during burial, and forensic fingerprints of exceptional specificity. This paper provides a review of this young field, which is organized to follow the evolution of molecular isotopic structure from biosynthesis, through diagenesis, catagenesis and metamorphism.