Contents ...................................................... iii
Introduction .................................................. vii
Contributors ................................................... ix
A LIGHT STABLE ISOTOPES
a' Planetary .....................................................1
1 Oxygen Isotopes in Meteorites ............................. 3
R.N. CLAYTON, University of Chicago, IL, USA
2 Structural and Isotopic Analysis of Organic Matter in
Carbonaceous Chondrites .................................. 17
I. GILMOUR, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK
3 Trace Element and Isotopic Fluxes/Subducted Slab ......... 39
G.E. BEBOUT, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA, USA
a" Atmosphere and Hydrosphere .................................. 87
4 Nonmass-Dependent Isotopic Fractionation Processes:
Mechanisms and Recent Observations in Terrestrial and
Extraterrestrial Environments ............................ 89
M.H. THIEMENS, University of California, San Diego, La
Mia, CA, USA
5 The Stable Isotopic Composition of Atmospheric CO2 ...... 113
D. YAKIR, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot,
Israel
6 Water Stable Isotopes: Atmospheric Composition and
Applications in Polar Ice Core Studies .................. 151
J. JOUZEL, Institut Pierre Simon Laplace, Saclay,
France
7 Stable Isotope Applications in Hydrologic Studies ....... 181
C. KENDALL and D.H. DOCTOR, United States Geological
Survey, Menlo Park, CA, USA
8 Elemental and Isotopic Proxies of Past Ocean
Temperatures ............................................ 227
D.W. LEA, University of California, Santa Barbara,
СA, USA
9 Sulfur-rich Sediments ................................... 253
M.B. GOLDHABER, US Geological Survey, Denver, CO, USA
10 Stable Isotopes in the Sedimentary Record ............... 285
A. LERMAN, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
N. CLAUER, Centre de Géochimie de la Surface,
CNRS-Universite Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France
11 The Global Oxygen Cycle ................................. 337
S.T. PETSCH, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA,
USA
12 High-Molecular-Weight Petrogenic and Pyrogenic
Hydrocarbons in Aquatic Environments .................... 377
T.A. ABRAJANO JR., B. YAN, J. SONG and R. BOPP,
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, USA
V. O'MALLEY, Enterprise Ireland, Glasnevin, Republic
of Ireland
B RADIOACTIVE TRACERS
13 Radiocarbon ............................................. 427
W.S. BROECKER, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory,
Palisades, NY, USA
14 Natural Radionuclides in the Atmosphere ................. 445
К.K. TUREKIAN and W.C. GRAUSTEIN, Yale University, New
Haven, CT, USA
C NOBLE GASES
15 Noble Gases ............................................ 467
F.A. PODOSEK, Washington University, St. Louis, MO,
USA
16 The Origin of Noble Gases and Major Volatiles in the
Terrestrial Planets ..................................... 493
D. PORCELLI, University of Oxford, UK
R.O. PEPIN, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN,
USA
17 Noble Gases as Mantle Tracers ........................... 521
D.R. HILTON, University of California San Diego, La
Jolla, CA, USA
D. PORCELLI, University of Oxford, UK
D RADIOGENIC ISOTOPES
18 Sampling Mantle Heterogeneity through Oceanic
Basalts: Isotopes and Trace Elements .................... 565
A.W. HOFMANN, Max-Planck-lnstitut fur Chemie, Mainz,
Germany, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades,
NY, USA
19 Radiogenic Isotopes in Weathering and Hydrology ......... 607
J.D. BLUM, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Ml,
USA
Y. EREL, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
20 Long-lived Isotopic Tracers in Oceanography,
Paleoceanography, and Ice-sheet Dynamics ................ 635
S.L. GOLDSTEIN and S.R. HEMMING, Columbia University,
Palisades, NY, USA
21 Records of Cenozoic Ocean Chemistry ..................... 671
G.E. RAVIZZA, University of Hawaii, Manoa, HI, USA
J.C. ZACHOS, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA,
USA
Appendix 1 ................................................. 701
Appendix 2 ................................................. 702
Appendix 3 ................................................. 706
Appendix 4 ................................................. 707
Index ......................................................... 709
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