Mont de Couple

Cretaceous tags

Mont de Couple is a summit with stunning views of the surrounding landscapes, with chalk hills formed underwater millions of years ago. This site is perfect for hikers, with marked trails that wind through diverse vegetation.

Audembert

The site is accessible all year round

Free

Dogs welcome

Facilities

  • Viewpoint

Geosite details

The Mont de Couple is a peak with stunning views of the surrounding landscapes, with chalk hills formed underwater millions of years ago. This site is perfect for hikers, with marked trails that wind through diverse vegetation. The climb to the top will reward you with a spectacular panorama of the Opal Coast, the sea and the surrounding fields.

The 'Big Bang'

13.8 billion years ago

Earth formed

4.6 billion years ago

 

540 million years ago

The Cambrian explosion of life: animals evolved and diversified as never before on Earth.

Devonian

419 million years ago

390 million years ago the oldest rocks you can see in the Geopark date back to the Middle Devonian. They are still quarried today in the Marquise basin in France.

Carboniferous

359 million years ago

Around 325 million years ago the Geopark was near the equator. The swamp forests from that period are preserved as coal, which was formerly mined in the Marquise basin in France as well as in East Kent and the Nord-Pas-de-Calais.

Permian

299 million years ago

Triassic

252 million years ago

210 million years ago the Geopark was in the centre of the Pangaea supercontinent, and dinosaurs roamed the land!

Jurassic

201 million years ago

150 million years ago the Geopark was submerged under the sea, the sands, clays, limestones, and sandstones that compose the Boulonnais region in France were deposited.

Cretaceous

145 million years ago

Over about 40 million years from 100-60 million years ago, Chalk formed at the bottom of a warm, shallow sea where the Geopark is located today. This was the first step towards the formation of our distinctive chalk landscape, which defines much of the Geopark.

Palaeogene

66 million years ago

Tectonic activity around 40 million years ago uplifted the territory of the Geopark by dozens of metres, creating an extensive chalk landscape that connected France and Great Britain.

Neogene

23 million years ago

Quaternary

2.6 million years ago

450,000 years ago, a megaflood destroyed the chalk ridge connecting Calais and Dover, creating the iconic white cliffs of the Geopark we see today

Getting here

Mont de Couple

62250 Audembert, France

Get directions

Discover Nearby Geosites

Share by email

Complete the fields below
Required

You can also share this with others too

These details will not be saved anywhere or used for any purpose other than sending this one-off email