Dear Bill and others, You're right to question the possibility of isotopic exchange between carbonate and oxygen flowing through a plasma furnace. It's difficult to assess the reaction temperature at the surface between carbonate particles and oxygen in the furnace. When I've removed samples after 4 hours treatment I estimate that the temperature of the glass container holding the sample is about 50-60oC. I don't necessarily believe this is the exact temperature attained by carbonate particles during plasma treatment, but I don't think the temperature can be much greater. Of course the assumption is that this temperature is too low to allow isotopic exchange between oxygen and carbonate to occur- agreement between plasma ashed and bleached samples appears to support this conclusion. Your test results for roasting fine grained carbonate samples at 200oC seem particularly informative and perhaps indicate that roasters should, in future, work at temperatures lower than those often reported in the literature. As I've mentioned before I can't think of an obvious reason for using 380oC roasting on calcite when 200oC roasting appears to be acceptable for aragonite. Perhaps roasting at 200oC should become the accepted method for those wanting to use this procedure. This still leaves a question mark against data published for samples roasted at "high" temperatures. On this basis I think I will conduct a test on a homogenised sample of brachiopod material to examine the effects of different roasting temperature and plasma treatment. I'll report the results when available. If, by any chance, someone has already conducted this type of test perhaps they could let us know the outcome. It might also save me running my own experiments. Cheers, Steve Crowley