Abstract
Pyrolysis–gas chromatography mass spectrometry (py-GC/MS) allows the characterisation of complex macromolecular organic matter. In lakes and wetlands this can potentially be used to assess the preservation/diagenesis and provenance of sediment organic matter. It can complement palaeoenvironmental investigations utilising ‘bulk’ sediment variables such as total organic carbon (TOC) and TOC/total nitrogen ratios. We applied py-GC/MS analyses to a ~32,000-year sediment record from the southern Cape coastline of South Africa. We used the results to evaluate the sources and extent of degradation of organic matter in this semi-arid environment. Marked down-core changes in the relative abundance of multiple pyrolysis products were observed. Correspondence analysis revealed that the major driver of this down-core variability in OM composition was selective preservation/degradation. Samples comprising highly degraded OM are primarily confined to the lower half of the core, older than ~12,000 years, and are characterised by suites of low-molecular-weight aromatic pyrolysis products. Samples rich in organic matter, e.g. surface sediments, are characterised by products derived from fresh emergent or terrestrial vegetation, which include lignin monomers, plant-derived fatty acids and long-chain n-alkanes. Pyrolysates from the late glacial-early Holocene period, approximately mid-way down the core are characterised by distinct suites of long-chain n-alkene/n-alkane doublets, which may reflect the selective preservation of recalcitrant aliphatic macromolecules and/or enhanced inputs of the algal macromolecule algaenan/polymerised algal lipids. Increased TOC, lower δ13C and increased abundance of more labile lignin and fatty acid products at the same depths suggest this period was associated with increased lake primary productivity and enhanced inputs of terrestrial OM. TOC is the only ‘bulk’ parameter correlated with the correspondence analysis axes extracted from the py-GC/MS data. Distinct fluctuations in TOC/total nitrogen ratio are not explained by variation in organo-nitrogen pyrolysis products. Notwithstanding, the study suggests that py-GC/MS has potential to complement palaeolimnological investigations, particularly in regions such as southern Africa, where other paleoenvironmental proxy variables in sediments may be lacking or equivocal.
Highlights
Biomarkers preserved in sediments can provide important insights into the origins and fate of sedimentary organic matter (OM)
It has long been recognised that different types of biomarkers or classes of organic compounds are subject to more rapid degradation than others
The inorganic sediment fraction is composed primarily of sand-sized, angular to sub-rounded quartz grains, with abundant rounded fragments of mollusc shells and marine micro-fauna, which are derived from the coastal dunes immediately south of site
Summary
Biomarkers preserved in sediments can provide important insights into the origins and fate of sedimentary organic matter (OM). It has long been recognised that different types of biomarkers or classes of organic compounds are subject to more rapid degradation than others. Various recalcitrant biomarkers or polymeric macromolecules, which may be preferentially preserved over time, have been identified within long-term sediment archives (de Leeuw et al 2006). With this method, the OM of a sample is thermally degraded to GC-amenable fragments, generating potentially complex, multifaceted datasets (van Smeerdijk and Boon 1987; Saiz-Jimenez and de Leeuw 1987). Data interpretation is not as straightforward as conventional lipid biomarker analyses, as the original macromolecular components must be inferred from the resulting pyrolysis products. The technique has been used to characterise the occurrence and type of lignin (Fuhrmann et al 2003; Vancampenhout et al 2008), or fire events/black carbon presence (Kaal et al 2009)
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