Isotope analysis narrows hunt for illegal pot farms
September 26, 2007
By Hillary Rosner - NYTNS
Every so often, a package of marijuana arrives in Jason B. West's mail at
the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. While West may not be the only one
on campus receiving deliveries of illegal drugs, he is probably the only one
getting them compliments of the federal government.
Advertisement West's marijuana supply is decidedly not for consumption. It
is meticulously cataloged and managed, repeatedly weighed to make sure none
disappears, and returned to the sender (a laboratory at the University of
Mississippi) or destroyed when he is done with it.
With financing from the Office of National Drug Control Policy, West, 34,
is creating a model that can identify the geographic origin of cannabis plants
based on certain chemical calling cards. The agency hopes to use the research
to help decide where to concentrate its resources.
The research, the Marijuana Signature Project, relies on stable isotopes,
which are forms of an element like nitrogen or oxygen, that have distinct
atomic masses. Long employed in ecological research, stable isotopes are
increasingly used for forensic purposes, including investigations into blood
doping, arson and trafficking in contraband such as drugs and endangered species.
“Stable isotopes are a signature on plant materials and things that
are derived from plants,” said West, a research assistant professor in
the university's biology department. “Using them, you can get information
about where something grew and its growth environment.”
Marijuana is the most pervasive illegal drug in the United States,
with 10,000 metric tons consumed yearly by Americans in their college
dormitories, suburban subdivisions, housing projects and Hollywood
mansions.
Although suppliers in Mexico and Canada, especially British Columbia,
are gaining market share, most of the marijuana that is bought, sold and
smoked by Americans is grown domestically. Six states – California, Hawaii,
Kentucky, Oregon, Tennessee and Washington – dominate domestic marijuana
production. Beyond that, relatively little is known about where the drug
comes from and how it makes its way around the country compared with what
is known about harder drugs like cocaine or heroin.
The drug control policy office is betting on stable isotopes to identify
unique markers in marijuana, distinguishing it not just by geography but
also by its cultivation method – for example, indoor versus outdoor.
“It's an epidemiological and forensic public health investigation,”
said David Murray, chief scientist at the agency and director of its
Counterdrug Technology Assessment Center.
Marijuana's status as an illegal substance is controversial, as is
the extent of its criminalization and the resources to control it.
West said his involvement in the project was not tied to any particular
policy judgment. “I strongly believe that part of the picture in any policy
development has to be the best possible science, and in cases where my work
can contribute to that, I think that's great,” he wrote in an e-mail message.
Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur, the base elements of
nearly everything on the planet, exist in multiple forms, each with a
specific atomic mass. These are called stable isotopes, as opposed to
radioactive isotopes, which are unstable.
Many natural processes discriminate among these isotopes, a phenomenon
called fractionation. A phase change from gas to liquid, for instance, weeds
out the lighter isotopes, which tend to stay behind in the gas form. When
water rains from a cloud, the water molecules in the rain contain heavier
oxygen and hydrogen isotopes than the water molecules that remain in the cloud.
The opposite occurs during evaporation, when lighter isotopes diffuse
into the atmosphere faster than their heavier counterparts. Fractionation
also occurs in enzymatic processes like photosynthesis.
In the marijuana project, West has found that cannabis plants grown
in different regions of the country contain distinct signatures based
on the isotopic composition of each region's water.
“Plants maintain the fingerprint of the climate and the environmental
conditions,” said Gene Kelly, a professor of soil science at Colorado State
University and an expert on stable isotopes, who is not affiliated with
West's research. “Theoretically, high-elevation pot plants should have
one sort of signature, coastal California plants another.”
Already, the project has hinted at some potentially surprising findings.
The marijuana that makes its way to West's lab has come primarily from drug
busts. One specimen came from a medical marijuana center in San Diego that
the Drug Enforcement Administration raided. While drug officials had assumed
that the marijuana sold at the dispensary would have been largely locally
grown, the isotope research suggested that just a small percentage was
grown in the area.
“There's considerable movement from multiple sources,” said Murray,
the chief scientist of the drug policy office. “And it ends up that
multiple streams of marijuana were present in a single location being
offered for sale.”
While he cannot pinpoint a plant's exact home turf, West said he
could, with increasing accuracy, place it within a region, called an
isoscape. On a map, the regions look like undulating bands of color,
with differences visible both north to south and west to east. West
has created computer models based on these isotopic variations and
other factors and is now trying to increase the accuracy of the models.
West is not limiting his stable isotope investigations to illegal
substances. He is also using the isotopes to determine the origin of
wine grapes, a potentially important application for the field of
terroir. His research has shown that regions of the western United
States impart their own isotopic markers on the grapes grown there.
“There's not much out there that you can't run stable isotopes
on,” said Jim White, a geologist at the University of Colorado who
runs the stable isotope laboratory there and is not connected to the
marijuana project. “If I fed you with a food that had a unique isotopic
signature and then measured your breath, I could see how quickly you
were metabolizing.”
White said that back in graduate school, he and his friends used
isotopes to find out how long it took for the water in their bodies
to completely cycle through. The experiment relied on several types
of beer with differing isotopic ratios.
West believes that his forensic investigations will have wider
applications, which may include answering questions about global
climate change.
“I think it has been a real two-way street between these targeted
forensics questions and more general ecological questions,” West said.
Kelly agreed. “This shows us that there are things we do in very
basic research that have real-world applications,” he said.
Meanwhile, Murray is optimistic that the Marijuana Signature
Project will help the agency better understand and control the
flow of the drugs.
“We can't go out and find this information because it's an illegal
activity where they shoot you in the back alley if you try to find out,”
Murray said. “Today we're making guesses. This will guide us toward
a scientific basis.”
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