Eight sediment gravity cores, collected from the joides and Drygalski basins, were analysed in order to understand late Pleistocene-Holocene biogenic flux changes in the Ross Sea, driven by paleoenvironmental changes. Core lithologies and magnetic-susceptibility depth profiles were used for core logging and stratigraphic correlation. Nineteen AMS radiocarbon dates of bulk organic matter were used to set chronological constraints and calculate sediment accumulation rates. These rates, which vary from 1.4-38 cm ka−1. were used to obtain the burial fluxes of biogenic components. The highest fluxes occur in the deepest parts of the basins (TOC, 0.05-0.2 g cm −2 ka−1; biogenic silica, 1.5-5 g cm−1 ka−1), where as topographic highs show the lowest values (TOC, 0.01-0.1 g cm−2 ka−1 ; biogenic silica, 0.1-1.4 g cm−2 ka−1). Dramatic changes in both physical properties and fluxes record the establishment of open marine-sedimentation conditions which occurred first in the joides basin and then, with a delay of ca. 6000 years, in the Drygalski basin. Both TOC and biogenic-silica fluxes increase through the Holocene, though slightly differently. The high fluxes of both 10Be and biogenic Ba suggest that sediment accumulation at basin sites is strongly influenced by lateral transport.