Râpa Roșie (Romanian for "red ravine") is a protected area, a natural monument of national interest in Alba County, Romania. It is a geological and botanical reserve, located in the extreme southwest of the Secașelor Plateau[ro], on the right bank of the river Secașul Mare, about 4 kilometres (2.5mi) north of Sebeș. With a size of approximately 24 hectares (59 acres), the reserve is classified as IUCN Category III.[1]
Quick Facts Râpa Roșie National Reserve/Natural monument, Location ...
Erosion and runoff has given it a prominent, sharp rocky appearance in the mountainside. Râpa Roșie itself measures approximately 10ha (25 acres) in size. Râpa Roșie stretches over a length of 800 metres (2,600ft). Its height measures between 50–125 metres (164–410ft) (300–425 metres (984–1,394ft) absolute altitude). A huge wall, almost vertical, gives the impression of a ruined ancestral monument. Tiered columns and pyramids, separated by ravines, form a badlands microrelief.
The first report of a Coțofeni culture find at Râpa Roșie was made by Fr. W. Schuster in 1865.[2] It was the first archaeological exploration made by him which revealed remnants of large and small pottery that had ornamentation, which also attested to the Coțofeni culture.[2][3]
Geology
Râpa Roșie is a geological reserve and a natural monument with unusual red bed features. Assessing the geological age of the formations has been a daunting task as no fossil remains had been found in the past.[4][5]
The geological monument has been called a "natural wonder".[6] Its walls rise to a height of 80–100 metres (260–330ft). Rock formations are naturally carved with very unusual shapes of columns, towers and pyramids formed over centuries of erosion by rainwater. Study of the feature has revealed geological formations of gravel, quartz sands, and sandstones. The deposits are distinct "succession of red clays, grey and reddish soap-stones, friable white soap-stone."[6] They all exhibit a reddish colour. Deep ravines are formed and during the rainy season the water flowing in the deep ravines is in the colour of the formation that is red; as the water falls into the ravines it makes a roaring sound.[5] The Râpa Roșie River flows in the vicinity.
Paleontology investigations have been carried out at Râpa Roșie near Sebeș town, on the southwestern side of the Transylvanian Plateau. The investigations were started in 1969. Dinosaur bones were reported in earlier investigations. Based on the investigations carried out by Codrea and Dica in 2005, they have assigned the age of these formations to the Early Miocene age (also conjectured as of Eggenburgian-Ottnangian age). Some of the rare fossils found here are vertebrates; one of these is of sauropod caudal vertebra. This fossil's original source is interpreted as the underlying Șard Formation of the Maastrichtian-Priabonian, which has eroded over the years. Paleontologists involved with the studies at Râpa Roșie have opined that this is the only sauropodgenus reported at any time in the latest CretaceousMaastrichtian) formations in Romania, which could be stated as Magyarosaurus.[4]
"Downloads"(PDF). Biodiversity Plants Organization. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
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