I have recently reviewed measurements of isotope ratio calibrations for carbon and oxygen, see Kaiser, J. (2008) Reformulated 17O correction of mass spectrometric stable isotope measurements in carbon dioxide and a critical appraisal of historic `absolute' carbon and oxygen isotope ratios. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 72, 1312-1334. http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.gca.2007.12.011 In the paper, I also discuss the relationship between different oxygen isotope scales and associated uncertainties. I argue, for example, that the difference between the 18O/16O ratios of atmospheric oxygen and VSMOW could be as high as (24.36±0.06) ‰ if the scale was normalised to VSMOW/SLAP difference of –56.18 ‰. This difference (to within 0.01 ‰) was reported by three laboratories as a result of a lab intercomparison exercise, see Verkouteren, R. M. and Klinedinst, D. B., 2004. Value assignment and uncertainty estimation of selected light stable isotope reference materials: RMs 8543-8545, RMs 8562-8564, and RM 8566 (2004 Edition). In: NIST (Ed.),NIST Spec. Publ. NIST, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA. As Willi Brand pointed out, all these values are subject to re-measurement, which is why we now have three different oxygen isotope scales (VSMOW, VPDB and Air-O2). It could also be argued that we actually have four scales, the fourth being VPDB-CO2, because the relation between the VPDB and VPDB-CO2 scales is just an assigned difference based on uncertain measurements. Regards Jan Kaiser **************************************************************** Dr Jan Kaiser School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia Norwich NR4 7TJ United Kingdom Tel. +44 (1603) 59-3393 (Office: 01.36) Fax +44 (1603) 59-1327