Sorbas Basin

The Sorbas Basin is a sedimentary basin around the town of Sorbas in Almeria Province in south-east Spain. It is believed to have been formed by extension, between two fault-bounded blocks which rotated anti-clockwise to take up the compression resulting from Europe's collision with Africa. The basin is filled with turbidites and evaporites of the Tortonian-Messinian ages of the Miocene Epoch.

It is a matter of some debate whether the basin dried out at the same time as the main Mediterranean basins.

Basin fill
The basin is divided into the following members:
 * At the bottom of the image, the house is constructed on the steep yellow cliffs of the resistant Azagador Member.
 * The lower (whiter) and upper (yellower) Abad Marls, a Tortonian/Messinian series of turbidites featuring pronounced Milankovic (20,000 year precession) cyclicity, allowing chronostratigraphic dating; these fine muds are easily eroded.
 * When the sea returned overdeepening the basin, salt water waterfalls eroded a 200 m depression patterned by 30 m deep gullies.
 * the Messinian Yesares Member, a gypsum evaporite, forms the steep bluffs at the top of the valley; there is some debate about how conformable its contact with the Abad marls is.
 * Pliocene deposits, rest unconformably on the top.
 * Complexity of drawdown and reflooding complicate correlation of the ‘Salinity Crisis' stratigraphy.

Basin significance
[[File:Messinian palaeogeography.svg|thumb|A possible palaeogeographical reconstruction of the Miocene Mediterranean. North to the left.


 * Red = current coastline
 * S = Sorbas basin, Spain
 * R = Rifean corridor
 * B = Betic corridor
 * G = Strait of Gibraltar
 * M = Mediterranean sea]]

The basin was separated from the main Mediterranean basin during the Messinian salinity crisis; therefore the timing of the Yesares Member relative to the main basin evaporites is crucial to distinguish between models of how the Mediterranean dried out.