IBAM   22618
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA AGRICOLA DE MENDOZA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Chemometric study of functional groups in Pennsylvanian gymnosperm-plant organs (Sydney Coalfield, Canada): Implications for chemotaxonomy and assessment of kerogen formation
Autor/es:
D´ANGELO, J.; ZODROW, E.; CAMARGO, A.B.
Revista:
ORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2010
ISSN:
0146-6380
Resumen:
he sample specimens for study comprise the foliage of four pteridosperm-medullosaleanplant-fossil species of differing preservation states and one of a cordaitean species from two CanadianMaritime Sub-Basins of Carboniferous age, 300 Ma, i.e., Sydney and Stellarton coalfields in Nova Scotia,respectively. Included in the sample are some coal samples from Sydney Coalfield, and published dataof coal macerals for comparisons. By applying Schulze´s maceration process to the fossil foliage toobtain the cuticles, five sample forms evolved, viz. compressions, cuticles, fossilized cuticles, and acidicand alkaline solutions from Schulze´s process to which is added Sydney´s coal samples as form 6. Areaintegration under the absorbance curve of spectra from solid and liquid state Fourier transforminfrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, produced functional chemical parameters which were organized into adata matrix of eight variables and 62 samples (8x62 matrix). Since we are interested in groupings ofthe sample forms as a function of phytochemistry (functional groups) to assess primarily thepalaeophytotaxonomic potential as a general approach to Carboniferous taxonomy, principalcomponents were extracted from that matrix, then using a subset of 4x33 samples in order to refinethe grouping results of the initial component analysis. In either case, a two-component model resulted,accounting for least 80% of cumulative variance in either case.Presented are results of the various analyses, which overall, are encouraging in offering increasingsupport for fossil-leaf chemotaxonomy, realizing at the same time our limited sampling number (56)and small sampling of genera (5). Apart from this general conclusion, which supports our previousFTIR work vis-à-vis chemotaxonomy, we noted functional-group similarities in our FTIR data withtypes of kerogen and coal macerals. On this basis, we hypothesize that in combination with thedifferent preservation states of our fossil specimens these factors have a bearing on kerogen genesisfrom plant material, i.e., the oil and gas prone Types I and II.