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On the mechanisms of sulfur isotope fractionation during microbial sulfate reduction

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2014-06-06

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Leavitt, William Davie. 2014. On the mechanisms of sulfur isotope fractionation during microbial sulfate reduction. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.

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Abstract

Underlying all applications of sulfur isotope analyses is our understanding of isotope systematics. This dissertation tests some fundamental assumptions and assertions, drawn from equilibrium theory and a diverse body of empirical work on biochemical kinetics, as applied to the multiple sulfur isotope systematics of microbial sulfate reduction. I take a reductionist approach, both in the questions addressed and experimental approaches employed. This allows for a mechanistic, physically consistent interpretation of geological and biological sulfur isotope records. The goal of my work here is to allow interpreters a more biologically, chemically and physically parsimonious framework to decipher the signals coded in modern and ancient sulfur isotope records.

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Geochemistry, Geobiology, Microbiology, enzyme isotope fractionation, geomicrobial kinetic isotope effects, microbial sulfate reduction, multiple sulfur isotopes, Phanerozoic oxygen, sulfur cycle

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