Thirty-five different samples from three different sulfur cycle, were examined in this stratigraphically oriented study of the Shell 22x-1 well (U.S.G.S. C]77 core) in the Piceance Basin, Colorado. Carbon isotopic compositions of constituents of Green River bitumens indicate mixing of three main components: products of primary photoautotrophs and their immediate consumers (delta approximately -30 parts per thousand vs PDB), products of methanotrophic bacteria (delta approximately -85 parts per thousand), and products of unknown bacteria (delta approximately -40 parts per thousand). For individual compounds synthesized by primary producers, delta -values ranged from -28 to -32 parts per thousand. C-13 contents of individual primary products (beta-carotane, steranes, acyclic isoprenoids, tricyclic triterpenoids) were not closely correlated, suggesting diverse origins for these mater als. C-13 contents of numerous hopanoids were inversely related to sulfur abundance, indicating that they derived both from methanotrophs and from other bacteria, with abundances of methanotrophs depressed when sulfur was plentiful in the paleoenvironment. Gamma-Cerane coeluted with 3beta(CH3),17alpha(H),21beta(H)-hopane, but delta-values could be determined after deconvolution. Gamma-Cerane (delta almost-equal-to -25 parts per thousand) probably derives from a eukaryotic heterotroph grazing on primary materials, the latter compound (delta almost-equal-to -90 parts per thousand) must derive from methanotrophic organisms. C-13 contents of n-alkanes in bitumen differed markedly from those of paraffins generated pyrolytically. Isotopic and quantitative relationships suggest that alkanes released by pyrolysis derived from a resistant biopolymer of eukaryotic origin and that this was a dominant constituent of total organic carbon.