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The composition and the source of hydrocarbons in sediments taken from the tectonically active Andaman Backarc Basin, Indian Ocean

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title The composition and the source of hydrocarbons in sediments taken from the tectonically active Andaman Backarc Basin, Indian Ocean
 
Creator Chernova, T.G.
Rao, P.S.
Pikovskii, Yu.I.
Alekseeva, T.A.
Nath, B.N.
Rao, B.R.
Rao, Ch.M.
 
Subject geochemistry
sediment analysis
chemical composition
hydrothermal activity
aromatic hydrocarbons
 
Description Concentrations of total hydrocarbons in sediments of the tectonically active part of the Andaman Basin ranged from 130-720 (with an average of 349) mg/kg in the most active Spreading zone (the Rift Valley) to 43-180 (with an average of 113 mg/kg in the less active Fault zone of the Deep Basin. Average concentration of total aromatic hydrocarbons ranged from 215 mg/kg in the Spreading zone to 49 mg/kg in the Deep Basin. Compound distributions were dominated by short-chain n-alkanes n-C sub(13)-n-C sub(24) (on the average, 77% in the Spreading zone and 64% in the Deep Basin, correspondingly). Distribution of n-alkanes in this region is characterized by a carbon predominance index (CPI sub(13-35)) being mainly either below or about 1,0. Substituted homologues of biphenyl, fluorene, naphthalene, phenanthrene, benzofluorenes, chrysene (6-methylchrysene), pyrene and perylene (3-methylperylene) as well as unsubstituted individual polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH): pyrene, benzo(a)pyrene, perylene, benzo(g,h,I) perylene, were identified in all samples. Concentrations of substituted homologues of PAH ranged, on the average, from 27 mu g/kg in the Spreading zone to 16 mu g/kg in the Deep Basin. Concentrations of unsubstituted individual PAH ranged, on the average, from 25 mg g/kg in Spreading zone to 17 mu g/kg in the Deep Basin. A composition of both aliphatic hydrocarbons and PAH in the sediments of the region studied is identical to the composition of non-biological compounds: petroleum products or hydrothermal organic matter. Anthropogenic sources in region studied are of minor importance. From the results obtained, it may be deduced that the hydrocarbons in the sediments of the tectonically active part of the Andaman Basin are mainly due to an alteration of sediment organic matter by emanation processes (hydrothermal and thermal fluxes, Earth's outgassing, petroleum show
 
Date 2009-01-07T10:28:48Z
2009-01-07T10:28:48Z
2001
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Marine Chemistry, Vol.75; 1-15p.
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/1545
 
Language en
 
Rights Copyright [2001]. All efforts have been made to respect the copyright to the best of our knowledge. Inadvertent omissions, if brought to our notice, stand for correction and withdrawal of document from this repository.
 
Publisher Elsevier