Bay of Santander

Coordinates: 43°28′N 3°48′W / 43.467°N 3.800°W / 43.467; -3.800

Santander
Comarca

Flag

Coat of arms
Country  Spain
Autonomous community  Cantabria
Province  Cantabria
Capital Santander
Municipalities
Area
  Total 268.26 km2 (103.58 sq mi)
Population
  Total 262,595
  Density 980/km2 (2,500/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Municipalities officially part of the comarca of Santander are in red; those not part of the administrative comarca are in light red, but the natural one.

The Bay of Santander is both a comarca of Cantabria and the largest estuary on the North coast of Spain, with an extension of 22.42 km² 9 km long and 5 km wide. Due to the influence of Santander and its metropolitan area,[1] nearly half of the population of the region is gathered around it,[2] which makes the anthropic pressure on this area of water quite notable.

The entrance to the Bay is lined by the Sardinero beaches, where the Isle of Mouro with its lighthouse can be found. The access to its interior is through a narrow channel of water between the Magdalena Peninsula, near to which are the Isle of the Tower and Horadada Island; and the sandbanks of the El Puntal, a long series of beaches and dunes that protect the tranquil inner waters of the Bay.

The morphology of the bay has suffered important changes in the last centuries. It is estimated that more than 50% of the original extension has been filled up, drying up a large amount of marsh area for grasslands, to expand the Port of Santander, and to create new industrial and residential areas. At the moment, work is going on to recover the seaside ecosystem in some areas of high ecological value.

Rivers and rias

Several rivers empty into the Bay of Santander. The most important is the Ria de Solía, in the South. The Ria de San Salvador empties in the center of the Bay via the Ria de Astillero while in the East flow the Rias of Carmen and Raos; to the West is the Ria de Cubas,which is the mouth of the Miera River.

Geology

The Santander Bay is formed by a diapir generated during the alpinotype orogeny of the Tertiary period. Its materials are composed of clays and salts (specially Keuper's gypsums) that ascended taking advantage of the faults. This movement generated an increase of the fracturing and an important dragging of rocks from the outer layers. The weakness zone generated by the Keuper's clays made easier its erosion compared with other sandstone or limestone areas, which involved the advance of the sea and the formation of the bay.

Spectral image of the Santander bay taken by the NASA satellite LandSat.

Flora and fauna

References

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