A 6.7million year record of marine sedimentation through the Permo Triassic Biotic Crisis shows notable shifts in mercury concentrations that varied over an order of magnitude (0.002 to 0.116μg/g). Mercury concentrations correlate strongly with total organic carbon, showing both parallel increasing and decreasing trends over geologic time scales. Results suggest that changes in bioproductivity strongly influence mercury sequestration into marine sediment. This may provide insight to potential marine response to modern anthropogenic Hg loading, and supports models that suggest enhanced bioproductivity that due to recent climate has increased Hg sequestration over time.