Autores
María V Baroni, Natalia S Podio, Raúl G Badini, Marcela Inga, Héctor A Ostera, Mariana Cagnoni, Ernesto Gallegos, Eduardo Gautier, Pilar Peral-García, Jurian Hoogewerff, Daniel A Wunderlin
Fecha de publicación
2011/10/26
Revista
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Volumen
59
Número
20
Páginas
11117-11128
Editor
American Chemical Society
Descripción
The main goal of this study was to propose a reliable method to verify the geographical origin of meat, establishing the influence of soil and water on its isotopic and elemental composition. Thus, beef meat, soil, and water samples were collected from three major cattle-producing regions of Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba, and Entre Ríos). Multielemental composition was determined on these three matrices by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), δ13C and δ15N by isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), and the 87Sr/86Sr ratio by thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS). Soil and drinking water samples could be characterized and clearly differentiated by combining the isotopic ratios and elements, demonstrating differences in geology and climatic conditions of three regions. Similarly, meat originating at each sampling area was characterized and differentiated using only five key …
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