Our first stop in southern Basque Country was to be Donostia | San Sebastián, but after a stressful tour of the city looking for open-air 🅿️ (we’re 3m tall) we gave up & left—without Basque cheesecake from La Viña. Westward to Zumaia, specifically Flysch de Zumaia, a cliff formation of near vertical strata within the UNESCO Geoparkea Zumaia. These strata formed from sediment/ shells that spent 50M years under the sea between Iberia & the European continent until their collision uplifted the flysch layers (marl, limestone & sandstone). At the eastern end of the beach is the Paleocene–Eocene Boundary, where 56M yrs ago a large release of greenhouse gases caused a 5-10°C temperature increase; the adjacent strata march down into the sea (📷1). Moving back in time, towards the middle of the beach are the Selandian–Thanetian Stratotype at 59.2M yrs ago, when Earth’s magnetic poles flipped polarity, & the Danian–Selandian Stratotype at 61.6M yrs ago, when sea level dropped ~80m; you can walk right up to these strata below San Telmo chapel (📷2). Ascend to the chapel & walk along the cliff (📷3); at the end of the rocky headland is the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K–Pg) Boundary, marked by a thin dark layer (📷4). This layer is rich in iridium, corresponding to the Chicxulub asteroid impact in the Yucatan 66M years ago that wiped out ~75% of Earth’s biota—most famously the non-avian dinosaurs. The return route notes that every one of your steps equates to the passage of about 500,000 yrs in geologic time. That’s a small step for a human; a giant step for humankind (less than 1 step = modern humans; 5 steps = the span of our existence in the Homo genus).

🇪🇸#spain #BasqueCountry 🇪🇺#europe 🚀#travel 🚐 #camperVan #nomad #roadTrip #vanLife 🛘#nature 🌍#unesco

@oCDo Very cool to see the K-T boundary exposed like this.
@phil_stevens Yes it’s not often so accessible (& actually visible!). BTW the Tertiary is now sub-divided into the Paleogene (66 to 23M yrs ago) & Neogene (23 to 2.6M yrs ago) & “Tertiary” has taken a well-earned retirement 😉. We saw the K–Pg formerly known as K-T in NZ at Ward Beach bear Chancet; the area had been uplifted by the Kaikoura quake. Pics at https://curiositydrive.org/2023/07/19/eastern-sights-and-sounds/
Eastern sights and sounds

From Kaikōura we continued north into the district of Marlborough. Famous for wine making, mussels and recreation in the natural playground that is the Marlborough Sounds, we aspired to get a bette…

Curiosity Drive