The disappearance of dichloromethane-extractable organic C (DEO-C) from hydrocarbon-contaminated soil is seldom fully accounted for by the evolution of CO2. An oil-contaminated soil was spiked with C-14 n-octadecane and a creosote-contaminated soil with C-14 [4,5,9,10]pyrene to test the hypothesis that contaminant C is redistributed among soil C fractions during bioremediation. The soils were incubated for 12 months and destructively analyzed at one week, two weeks, one month, and thereafter monthly. The soil fractions examined were biomass-C (BC), humic-C (HC), and water soluble-C (WSC). Humin-C (HNC) was calculated as C-14(total) minus the sum of direct measurements of the other C fractions. Labeled CO2 and volatile organic C (VOC) were collected and measured. The data provide a series of 'snapshots' of the transformations of contaminant-C in each soil. VOC was insignificant and for both soils 47-50% of the applied C-14 was recovered in the evolved CO2 only after three months incubation. The primary fate of C from the labeled organic Compounds ill both soils was into the humic-C and humin-C fractions; in some cases as much as 50% of the applied C-14 was recovered from these fractions. Neither BC nor WSC were significant fates of the C-14 during this incubation, and in combination did not exceed 12% of the total C-14 applied in each soil. Enrichment of the humic-C and humin-C with contaminant-derived C poses interesting questions regarding the end point of bioremediation, traditionally total removal of the contaminant. Metabolism of the C to other fractions is clearly an alternate possibility. Furthermore, the fractions enriched may actually be those considered beneficial to soil quality, Such as humic and humin-C. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.