Abstract
The higher boiling point range of saturated aliphatic hydrocarbon fractions extracted from North Sea water have been re-investigated in detail with improved high resolution glass capillary columns suitable for high temperature gas-chromatography. The resulting chromatograms reveal hydrocarbon patterns, most of which have the same common feature: a smooth distribution of the long-chain n-alkanes combined with a lack of the branched alkanes normally expected for fossil fuel oil. Instead, two homologous series of iso- and anteiso-alkanes could be detected. Since this finding is always associated with traces of present or past fossil fuel oil contamination of the upper water column, these environmental n-, iso and anteisoalkanes are considered to be recently ‘bio-converted’ from fossil fuel oil hydrocarbons. They form a third group beside recent biogenic and fossil petrogenic hydrocarbons in the marine environment. Oil pollution records of the marine environment will have to take into account this group of microbial hydrocarbons.
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