“…Alternatively, it has been proposed that an increase in continental weathering rates and associated runoff of terrigenous nutrients stimulated the enhanced primary productivity and subsequent marine anoxia (e.g., Wilder, 1994;Algeo and Scheckler, 1998;Averbuch et al, 2005). Increased terrestrial runoff associated with enhanced continental weathering during the Devonian crises has been documented by a number of proxies (e.g., strontium-isotopes, Chen et al, 2005; osmium-isotopes, Percival et al, 2019; silicon/aluminum (Si/Al), titanium/aluminium (Ti/Al), and zirconium/rubidium (Zr/Rb) ratios, Racki et al, 2002;Pujol et al, 2006;Riquier et al, 2006;Weiner et al, 2017;Paschall et al, 2019), with evidence of soil erosion and wildfires from organic-geochemistry studies further highlighting the contribution of terrestrial matter to the marine realm (Marynowski et al, 2012;Kaiho et al, 2013;Rimmer et al, 2015). Here, the distribution of nutrients in marine shelf basins during Late Devonian anoxic events, as well as their potential source, is further investigated, using phosphorus as a tracer of nutrient influx and recycling at a number of new records of Upper Devonian strata with a wide palaeogeographical coverage.…”