The organic structures in sapropels sampled from two cores obtained at know
n locations beneath the southern Black Sea have been characterised. Fluores
cence petrography shows the sapropels to occur as layers of impure alginite
, similar to 50 mu m thick, within Unit 2 of the sediments. Solid state C-1
3 NMR indicates the bulk chemical structures to be very similar to those in
an immature Type 1 kerogen (lamosite) oil shale with an aromaticity of sim
ilar to 0.2. Consistent with the immaturity of the sapropels, which are bet
ween 3000 and 7000 years old, temperature programmed reduction showed aliph
atic and aromatic sulphides to be the major organic sulphur forms. Alkanes
formed from phytoplankton lipids, alkyl benzenes, alkyl naphthalenes and so
me phenols dominated the mix of volatile compounds identified by pyrolysis-
gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. About half of the sapropels remained
as an involatile, tarry residue after pyrolysis. The structure of the sapro
pels is consistent with their formation resulting from marine phytoplankton
with only small terrigeneous inputs. Future catagenesis may be expected to
decarboxylate the lipids, increase the aromaticity and to dry and compress
the muds to form a source rock. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights
reserved.