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102 JOSEPH P. BOTTING

Fig. 2. Idealized distribution of oxygenation effects around ash-fall deposits in a shelf region with immobile
water mass: central area of benthic oxygenation by strong overturning, and deoxygenation in lateral regions
due to partial overturning and plankton bloom. Anoxic regions begin to disperse following decline of plankton
bloom (one year), allowing immigration of benthos from exterior.

other faunal elements was noted, although data

were usually insufficient for meaningful abun-

dance comparisons. The complex overall

patterns are consistent throughout all studied

sections, minimizing the possibility of an arti-

ficial distribution. A generalization of the results

is shown in Figure 1 and explained below. Full

details of these data, including deeper-water

facies from which benthic blooms were absent,

will be published elsewhere, with full interpre-

tation, and are also available in Botting (2000).

The ash bed is usually barren, with only oc-

casional chitinozoans recorded. A brief, usually

minor bloom of small mobile benthos (ostra-

codes and simple burrows) immediately fol-

lowed ash deposition, overlapping with a

subsequent dramatic plankton bloom of Apato-

bolus micula and graptolites. The plankton

bloom showed a pseudo-logarithmic decline,

while A. micula also formed a partly overlapping

second bloom, of longer duration. Thereafter,

abundance gradually declined to, or below,

initial levels, unless benthic oxygenation became

established. The ratio of ostracode to graptolite

abundance varied according to initial con-

ditions; in originally anoxic facies, the plankton

(Apatobolus micula plus graptolites) bloom was

by far the greater, and vice versa for originally

dysaerobic substrates (Fig. 1). A horizontal

sequence, sampling the 2 cm immediately above

the ash upper surface, revealed steep faunal

abundance gradients (>300% over 10m), corre-

sponding with up to a 20% change in ash thick-

ness. A strong maximum in the immediately

post-ash plankton abundance overlay the thick-

est part of the bentonite.

Multiple lines of evidence were used to con-

strain the processes operating, and a coherent

interpretation developed, based on vertical

circulation of a stratified water column. Fine ash

deposited onto a standing body of water

descended initially as turbid flows rather than

discrete particles (Carey 1997). Provided a

critical water depth (strongly dependent on

several parameters) was not exceeded, these

flows replaced deep, dysaerobic water with

aerobic surface water, enabling a bloom of small

mobile benthos, restricted by low food supplies.

Corresponding upwelling induced a large-scale

plankton bloom, continuing until inertial circu-

lation ceased. This circulation could have been

maintained directly by ash deposition for several

weeks, through continuous fragmentation of

floating pumice and slow sinking of fine

particles. Following ash deposition, circulation

would be prolonged by the temperature inver-

sion of ash-free fluid, and perhaps enhanced by

large-scale particulate phytoplankton produc-

tion at the surface. Upwelling is expected to

have continued weakly for a few months, suf-

ficiently long to establish a substantial plankton

bloom involving several trophic levels. The
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