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Article Dans Une Revue Organic Geochemistry Année : 1998

A novel pathway of soil organic matter formation by selective preservation of resistant straight-chain biopolymers: chemical and isotope evidence

Résumé

A resistant soil organic residue, ‘humin', has been analysed by solid-state 13C-NMR and pyrolysis followed by molecular and 13C determination of the pyrolysate alkane-alkene fraction. The results show the occurrence of highly aliphatic, straight-chain biopolymer material as a substantial part of soil organic matter. They confirm the hypothesis by which a part of soil organic matter can be formed by selective preservation of resistant highly aliphatic microbial polymers. This pathway comes in addition to the longstanding neogenesis hypothesis involving recondensation of small polar molecules such as amino acids, carbohydrates and phenols.
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hal-00193336 , version 1 (03-12-2007)

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Eric Lichtfouse, Claire Chenu, François Baudin, Claudette Leblond, Martine da Silva, et al.. A novel pathway of soil organic matter formation by selective preservation of resistant straight-chain biopolymers: chemical and isotope evidence. Organic Geochemistry, 1998, 28 (6), pp.411-415. ⟨10.1016/S0146-6380(98)00005-9⟩. ⟨hal-00193336⟩
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