| Literature DB >> 11558656 |
C L Kester1, R O Rye, C A Johnson, C Schwartz, C Holmes.
Abstract
Sulfur isotopes have received little attention in ecology studies because plant and animal materials typically have low sulfur concentrations (< 1 wt.%) necessitating labor-intensive chemical extraction prior to analysis. To address the potential of direct combustion of organic material in an elemental analyzer coupled with a mass spectrometer, we compared results obtained by direct combustion to results obtained by sulfur extraction with Eschka's mixture. Direct combustion of peat and animal tissue gave reproducibility of better than 0.5/1000 and on average, values are 0.8/1000 higher than values obtained by Eschka extraction. Successful direct combustion of organic material appears to be a function of sample matrix and sulfur concentration. Initial results indicate that direct combustion provides fast, reliable results with minimal preparation. Pilot studies underway include defining bear diets and examining fluctuations between freshwater and brackish water in coastal environments.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11558656 DOI: 10.1080/10256010108033281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Isotopes Environ Health Stud ISSN: 1025-6016 Impact factor: 1.675