NATURAL VARIATIONS IN THE ISOTOPIC CONTENT of SULFUR AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE
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Abstract
A mass spectrometer investigation has been made of the relative
abundance of the sulfur Isotopes obtained from a wide variety of terres
trial and msteoritic sources. Variations up to 6.5 and 3*25 percent have
been found in the concentration of 8^ and S , respectively. This would
mean a corresponding variation of 13 percent in the concentration of S^.
The variations were determined with a precision of 0.1 percent. In general,
sulfates are enriched in the heavier isotopes; sulfur of organic or bac
terial origin is depleted in the heavier isotopes, whereas the isotopic
content of meteorites is remarkably constant and coincides approximately
with the average isotopic composition of terrestrial sulfur. A one to one
correlation has been found between the isotopic abundance of the sulfur in
sedimentary sulfides of marine origin and the deposition age of the sample.
The close agreement between theoretical and experimental results
indicates that these variations in the abundance of the sulfur isotopes
are related to the differences in the chemical properties of isotopic
sulfur compounds.