Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang re-established himself as the Premier League's top goalscorer this season ahead of Mohamed Salah by netting a brace as Arsenal bounced back from consecutive defeats with a 3-1 win over Burnley.

Salah's strike against Wolves on Friday left Aubameyang second among the division's top marksmen, but the Gabon international was clinical in either half of a game that saw Arsenal bury the memory of their 3-2 loss at Southampton and 2-0 League Cup reverse against Tottenham.

Alex Iwobi added a third for the hosts in stoppage time when he beat the Burnley offside trap. 

Unai Emery started Mesut Ozil for the first time in a league game since November 11 and the German made a strong case for a regular spot in an Arsenal side pushing Chelsea hard for fourth place in the table.

Defeat leaves Burnley in danger of going second-bottom later on Saturday depending on results elsewhere after Sean Dyche's men forced a second-half goal through Ashley Barnes, but failed to muster a comeback that might have earned them a precious point.

After Burnley's Ashley Westwood squandered an early chance, Aubameyang pounced after 14 minutes to give Arsenal the lead, guiding the ball into the bottom corner of Joe Hart's net with the outside of his right foot from 12 yards after fine work from Ozil, who captained the side, and a first-time cross by Sead Kolasinac.

Emery was forced to replace Nacho Monreal with Stephan Lichtsteiner after 36 minutes, the Spaniard joining an already lengthy list of Arsenal defenders carrying knocks, but at that point Burnley were struggling to make any impact in the final third despite enjoying spells of possession.

The Clarets, though, did start the second half brightly, but Arsenal caught them with a fast break that saw Kolasinac fly down the left wing before switching the play via Alexandre Lacazette to Aubameyang, who drove the ball high into the net from 10 yards, beating Hart for power.

While Arsenal were by far the better side going forward, they were regularly pinned back by a Burnley side who forced what turned out to be a consolation when the ball bounced out of a crowd of players for Barnes to fire home from the edge of the six-yard box.

The visitors were pushing for an equaliser when Iwobi burst over the halfway line and worked with Ozil to pull the Burnley defence apart before scoring with an angled drive in the 91st minute to make sure of the victory.

What does it mean? Gunners pile the pressure on Chelsea

Arsenal were well short of their best, but they ground out a result to pull level with Chelsea in the race for Champions League qualification. 

Kolasinac colossal from back to front

With the Gunners missing defenders due to injury, Kolasinac provided more than his share of physicality and coverage up and down the left flank, as well as playing a vital role in Arsenal's second goal.

Wasteful Westwood costs Clarets

Westwood had a fantastic one-on-one with Bernd Leno in the second minute of the game, but trickled his shot wide when a goal would have transformed Burnley's chances.

Key Opta Facts

- Arsenal found themselves ahead in a Premier League game at half-time for the first time this season, last doing so against Huddersfield on the final day of last season.

- Courtesy of their 12 points, this is Burnley’s worst top-flight campaign after 18 games since 1970-71, when they had accrued 10 at this stage (3pts for a win) and were ultimately relegated.

- Burnley boss Sean Dyche has lost all seven of his Premier League meetings with Arsenal, more defeats in the competition than he has suffered against any other side.

- Since 2014-15, Ashley Barnes is one of just five players to score in the Premier League against all of the ‘big six’ sides along with Sadio Mane, Gylfi Sigurdsson, Jamie Vardy and Georginio Wijnaldum.

What's next

Arsenal travel to Brighton and Hove Albion on Boxing Day in the hope of securing back-to-back victories, while Burnley take on Everton at Turf Moor.