Abstract

A method is described for the determination of organic carbon in liquid seawater samples by combustion at a high temperature. Although the method is not easy to perform, it has been successfully employed for a direct comparison to the standard method of persulfate oxidation. With seawater from the central western North Atlantic Ocean, the standard method measured an average of 78% as much carbon as the high temperature method. This indicates organic matter in seawater that is resistant to oxidation by persulfate; some of it appears to be of a colloidal nature. The persulfate resistant organic matter is most noticeable in a region below the surface 100 m and seems to decrease slowly with depth, indicating deep ocean biological utilization of organic matter. Due to a possible procedural error in the standard persulfate oxidation method, the differences indicated here may actually be conservative and the content of total organic carbon in the sea may be as much as twice as high as has been indicated by previous estimates.

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