This paper examines the literature on research into the effects of burial b
y deposition of blown sand, volcanic deposits (tephra, lavas and lahars) or
fluvial sediment on vegetation and the subsequent capacity of the vegetati
on for survival and regeneration. Research on this topic involves the under
standing and skills of the biogeographer, the ecologist and the geomorpholo
gist and represents a potentially very interesting area for integration bet
ween these areas of physical geography.
Burial is closely linked to concepts of plant succession and pedogenesis. A
general model of burial stress is presented that shows how types of stress
are linked to the burial environment and the characteristics of the burial
event, in particular the magnitude and frequency. The importance of elasti
city of response of species to burial is vital, as demonstrated by the evol
ution of certain species, such as those of the genus Ammophila in sand dune
s that appear to respond positively to the burial process.
Research into burial by dust deposition, by volcanic tephra and lavas, by s
and in coastal and lake dune environments, in desert environments and by al
luvium and 'run-on' following hydrological events are reviewed in turn. The
significance of burial to palaeoenvironmental and palaeoecological researc
h is then demonstrated by reference to machair sand dune stratification in
the Outer Hebrides and vegetation damage and burial following proximal volc
anic impacts in New Zealand. Finally, methods of experimental research into
burial in both the field and in the greenhouse are summarized and the conc
lusion stresses the need for more holistic approaches to the study of buria
l that link the biogeographical aspects of plant ecophysiology and both ind
ividual species and community ecology to the various geomorphic processes o
f deposition and sedimentation.