The English RivieraGeopark in Torbay is one of eight Geoparks in the United Kingdom, and one of over one hundred and forty worldwide. It is one of only two urban Geoparks in the UK, and was declared a Geopark on 16 September 2007. The Geopark covers 6,200 hectares of land and 4,100 hectares of sea bed. Geopark status was granted to Torbay on the grounds that the area has a varied geology covering several geological periods, which are exposed to the surface in many areas, and also that Torbay Council and other bodies have worked to promote the area's distinctive geology to the community via education.
The earliest rocks within the Geopark were deposited in environments not unlike the Caribbean today; warm, life-rich shallow seas provided the geopark with the Torbay Limestones and sandstones. At the same time, volcanic eruptions blanketed these sediments with volcanic ash. The limestone was held together by hard sponges known as stromatoporoids - modern corals that we are accustomed to today were yet to evolve, but early corals did thrive alongside crinoids and trilobites and early relatives of ammonites. At this time the area was south of the equator.
Carboniferous
During the Carboniferous period the limestones and sandstones of the Devonian were forced up by the Variscan Orogeny which affected what are now Devon and Cornwall and stretched as far as the Czech Republic in the East and North America in the west. This mountain-building event had a massive effect on the future geopark, tilting sediments and forming the beautiful fold on the island of Ore Stone.
Permian
280 million years agocontinental collision had brought the geopark into the centre of Pangea and into the middle of a huge desert, at a similar latitude to the modern-day Sahara. This desert is preserved as both windblown, fine sandstones which form Roundham Head, and breccia which was deposited after large storms and flash floods that periodically occurred within the usually parched desert. These rocks stretch across the UK and are found as far afield as Yorkshire. Collectively they are known as the New Red Sandstone. Their red colour is derived from groundwater under the desert caused iron in the sediments to alter to haematite.
During the Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous and Tertiary periods sediments continued to be deposited over the Geopark; but later erosion has removed them, leaving no trace; however activity elsewhere across the globe has left impressions on the geopark; the collision of Africa and Europe has been felt in the Geopark, leaving the bay crisscrossed with faults as a result of the huge pressures.