Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.

Lipids in sediments can provide information about both organic mattter source changes and post-depositional alteration processes. This study concentrates on alcohol, sterol and alkane distributions present in Great Lakes and Northwest Atlantic sediments to define these processes. Potential lacustrin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Leenheer, Mary Janeth
Other Authors: Ann Arbor
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/158674
id ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/158674
record_format openpolar
spelling ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/158674 2024-01-07T09:45:15+01:00 Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments. Leenheer, Mary Janeth Ann Arbor 1981 259 p. application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/158674 English eng https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/158674 Science Thesis 1981 ftumdeepblue 2023-12-10T17:42:44Z Lipids in sediments can provide information about both organic mattter source changes and post-depositional alteration processes. This study concentrates on alcohol, sterol and alkane distributions present in Great Lakes and Northwest Atlantic sediments to define these processes. Potential lacustrine source samples analyzed include plankton tows and bluff samples. Lipid distributions of these samples provided distinctive indicators of lake inputs from aquatic and terrigenous sources. Distributions of lipids settling through the lacustrine water column were investigated by analysis of sediment trap samples and suspended particulates. Preferential degradation of shorter chain alcohols and the aquatic sterols occurs during settling. Two sediment cores representing the last 5000 years deposition in Lake Michigan and the last 600 years of deposition in Lake Huron were investigated. Trends in their lipid components indicate that decreases downcore result from microbial degradation and not source change. Stenol to stanol conversion proceeds faster for the C(,27) (aquatic) sterols than for the C(,29) sterols. First order rate constant approximations support faster decreases for the aquatic relative to terrigenous components. The different rates of degradation of lipid classes (alkanes<<sterols<alcohols) suggest that downcore changes represent degradation and not source changes. Linear programming analyses indicate that the unbound extract has a primarily terrigenous origin while the bound extract has a more aquatic character. Marine sediments from the Gulf of Maine, the North Atlantic continental rise, and the Bermuda Rise were analyzed. While the Gulf of Maine and Great Lakes samples contained similar types of input, different processes such as extensive bioturbation and conversion from an unbound to a bound form are active in the Gulf of Maine core. With increasing distance from shore, the marine sedimentary lipids have a more aquatic character. The Bermuda Rise sediment lipids reflect significant downcore ... Thesis North Atlantic Northwest Atlantic University of Michigan: Deep Blue
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Deep Blue
op_collection_id ftumdeepblue
language English
topic Science
spellingShingle Science
Leenheer, Mary Janeth
Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.
topic_facet Science
description Lipids in sediments can provide information about both organic mattter source changes and post-depositional alteration processes. This study concentrates on alcohol, sterol and alkane distributions present in Great Lakes and Northwest Atlantic sediments to define these processes. Potential lacustrine source samples analyzed include plankton tows and bluff samples. Lipid distributions of these samples provided distinctive indicators of lake inputs from aquatic and terrigenous sources. Distributions of lipids settling through the lacustrine water column were investigated by analysis of sediment trap samples and suspended particulates. Preferential degradation of shorter chain alcohols and the aquatic sterols occurs during settling. Two sediment cores representing the last 5000 years deposition in Lake Michigan and the last 600 years of deposition in Lake Huron were investigated. Trends in their lipid components indicate that decreases downcore result from microbial degradation and not source change. Stenol to stanol conversion proceeds faster for the C(,27) (aquatic) sterols than for the C(,29) sterols. First order rate constant approximations support faster decreases for the aquatic relative to terrigenous components. The different rates of degradation of lipid classes (alkanes<<sterols<alcohols) suggest that downcore changes represent degradation and not source changes. Linear programming analyses indicate that the unbound extract has a primarily terrigenous origin while the bound extract has a more aquatic character. Marine sediments from the Gulf of Maine, the North Atlantic continental rise, and the Bermuda Rise were analyzed. While the Gulf of Maine and Great Lakes samples contained similar types of input, different processes such as extensive bioturbation and conversion from an unbound to a bound form are active in the Gulf of Maine core. With increasing distance from shore, the marine sedimentary lipids have a more aquatic character. The Bermuda Rise sediment lipids reflect significant downcore ...
author2 Ann Arbor
format Thesis
author Leenheer, Mary Janeth
author_facet Leenheer, Mary Janeth
author_sort Leenheer, Mary Janeth
title Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.
title_short Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.
title_full Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.
title_fullStr Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.
title_full_unstemmed Use of Lipids as Indicators of Diagenetic and Source-Related Changes in Holocene Sediments.
title_sort use of lipids as indicators of diagenetic and source-related changes in holocene sediments.
publishDate 1981
url https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/158674
genre North Atlantic
Northwest Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
Northwest Atlantic
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/158674
_version_ 1787426740777254912