Geology of the Tour de France: for cycling commentators and their audience
The foundations of the Tour de France
On 24 June, the website 鈥楪eo-Tour de France鈥 will go live to serve sports editors, cycling commentators and bicycle racing fans. The site will describe the natural decor of each stage of the Tour de France: the various landscapes and what can be found deep under the surface, for both the men鈥檚 and the women鈥檚 races. Did you know that dinosaurs have been uncovered along the route?
It suddenly hit me: a live broadcast of a cycling race is also a perfect opportunity for a geological excursion
, explains Douwe van Hinsbergen, initiator of the Geo-Tour de France, Professor at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 and die-hard cycling fan. A lot of cyclists - and the people watching them - are interested in the landscapes they pass through as they race. And a lot of geoscientists love to cycle themselves. So maybe we can help the cycling commentators with our knowledge of the landscapes and their underlying treasures!
To make that happen, Van Hinsbergen approached colleagues from the Netherlands and abroad to write a series of blogs about the geology of the individual stages. And that was the start of the Geo-Tour de France.
Ancient continents
This year鈥檚 Tour de France will race through the remains of three ancient continents, along the traces of the meteorite impact that marked the end of the era of the dinosaurs, through the chalk landscape of the 鈥淲hite Cliffs of Calais鈥, over extinct volcanoes, over pieces of Saudi Arabia in Paris, and many more fascinating geographical and geological phenomena along the way. For the men鈥檚 race, will explain a geological phenomenon along the route and the underlying process. The women鈥檚 race will ride over older and older geology every day, and the blogs will take the reader to those worlds and their inhabitants.

Geological time scales
The website examines the ancient worlds that lie under the landscapes along the route. These are the sum of a history stretching back millions or billions of years: the fields of geology, geochemistry and geophysics. But the website also addresses modern landscapes along the route: how they were created, the rivers and glaciers that flow through them, the characteristics of the soil, and the natural disasters like landslides that strike at any time. This is the specialist field of physical geography, typically on timescales shorter than hundreds of thousands of years.
Send pictures
The audience can also share photos and ask questions via the Twitter hashtag #GeoTdF
, adds van Hinsbergen. And during the Tour, we鈥檒l provide daily commentary via our Twitter account .
The commentary won鈥檛 be limited to the Tour de France itself; the Twitter account will explain the geology of cycling races all over the world, all season long.
Seven countries, seven languages
Researchers from seven countries participate in the Geo-Tour de France. In addition to those from Utrecht 木瓜福利影视, the site will feature contributions from the universities of Birmingham (United Kingdom), Montpellier and Rennes (France), M眉nster (Germany), Granada (Spain), Utah (United States), the VU Amsterdam, Naturalis Biodiversity Center (Leiden) and the Geological Surveys of France and of Denmark and Greenland.
is available in Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish, Italian and Danish. The Twitter account is