By: magic-gigapans
Image: Alan Pitts, Mid-Atlantic Geo-Image Collection
License:
Creative Commons Non Commercial ⧉
Uploaded: 13 May 2020
Last Updated: 22 May 2020
532 megapixels
30,372 x 17,516 pixels
101.2 in X 58.4 in at 300dpi
This Gigapan shows the world famous exposure of the K/T boundary recorded in the upper Cretaceous to Eocene Scaglia Rossa Formation near Gubbio, Italy. This outcrop, exposed in the Bottaccione gorge, is a classical locality in the history of geoscience. The research conducted here directly influenced the fields of paleomagnetism, micropaleontology, sedimentology and helped redefine current views on Earth History. The studies at this site produced paleomagnetic reversal stratigraphy, and the impact theory of the end cretaceous mass extinction event. The Scaglia Rossa is a prominent formation in Marche-Umbria Apennine mountains in central Italy. It is a pink to red pelagic limestone with some marl and chert, the name “Scaglia” (Italian for scale) is given for the scaly appearance and Rossa for the red color. Exposed at this section of the Scaglia Rossa there is the centimeter-thick clay interval at the Cretaceous Paleogene which contains an above average amount of the element iridium.