A reconstructed area helped a good deal with visualising what the original might have been like.
The Rambla de la Sierra just west of Tabernas is a superb field stop though sadly the cowboy on horseback at the entrance to the track wasn’t on duty today. Two ‘sets’ of sediments date from the Tortonian-Serrevallian and then from the Messinian. The former are continental and separated from the latter marine sediments by an angular unconformity. Faults and channels can be seen in 3D as the rambla meanders which make this a great place for visualising the ancient landscape.
After a short excursion to see the Plataforma Solar the troops were howling for a caffeine fix (not to mention a cake fix... Colin and Annie...) and we found a pair of cafés – we’d been to the further one before but went to the nearer one which seemed to be aimed at rock music and Harley Davidson fans, rearranged the furniture to sit in a group in the sun and relaxed before heading back to Turre. ... well some did! Jan and I, with passenger Gill in tow (sorry Gill - no choice!), headed out into the campo to see if we could identify the best route to tomorrow’s first stop. Sadly, although we recognised irrigation hydrants we failed to find the site we had been to before – though the roads seemed much better graded than 5 years before! A bit of exploration on Google Earth that evening pinpointed the Lat and Long which duly went into the satnav for Emily to have a think about overnight.
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