Trnovski Gozd
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The Trnovo Forest Plateau ( sl, Trnovski gozd) is a
karst Karst is a topography formed from the dissolution of soluble rocks such as limestone, dolomite, and gypsum. It is characterized by underground drainage systems with sinkholes and caves. It has also been documented for more weathering-resistant ro ...
plateau that constitutes the extreme northwest end of the Dinaric Alps.Perko, Drago, & Milan Orožen Adamič. 1998. ''Slovenija: pokrajine in ljudje''. Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga, p. 324. The Trnovo Forest Plateau has a karst character, without surface watercourses and broken up by closed valleys, outcroppings, hills, caves, shafts, and smaller karst features: solution pans, rills, karrens, and other features. Significant karst features include ice caves. The vegetation inversion at Big Paradana Ice Cave ( sl, Velika ledena jama v Paradani) in the eastern part of the plateau, measuring by , is a ''locus classicus'' and in the past ice was harvested from it and exported via Gorizia and Trieste to Egypt. The Trnovo Forest Plateau has three nature reserves: * Big Paradana Ice Cave * Golak Peaks () and Spruce Valley ( sl, Smrekova draga, a karst depression) * The Smrečje forest reserve The southern ridge of the Trnovo Forest Plateau is Čaven.


Terrain

The influence of tectonic activity is very evident in the area. There are many depressions, solution valleys, small karst poljes, and the remains of former river valleys. During the Pliocene the rivers leveled the tectonic upwelling and filled the valleys. Traces were also left by Pliocene glaciation because glaciers created small cirques on what had been a relatively level surface, as well as ground moraines and terminal moraines. The rivers transported gravel and deposited it in lower areas, filling the depressions.


Rock

The north side of the plateau shows tectonic formation along the Idrija Fault oriented in the Dinaric direction,Zupan Hajna, Nadja. 2014. ''Nepopolno raztapljanje karbonatnih kamnin v kraških jamah Slovenije''. Ljubljana: ZRC, p. 165. and the south side shows the results of tectonic thrusting of Mesozoic limestone and dolomite over younger Eocene flysch. Two-thirds of the surface is covered by limestone, one-fourth by dolomite, and the remainder is flysch and loose material.


Mountains

The highest summit is Big Mount Golak (''Veliki Golak'', ). On the northern side, some other panoramic and frequently visited summits are Little Mount Golak (''Mali Golak'', ), Mount Poldanovec (), and Pointed Peak (Špičasti vrh ), and on the southern side Big Mount Modrasovec (''Veliki Modrasovec'', ), Mount Kucelj (), Blue Peak (''Sinji vrh'', ), and Kovk Hill ().


Natural landmarks

* Skozno natural rock window (above Šmihel) * Otlica natural rock window (above Ajdovščina) * Hubelj karst spring (above Ajdovščina) * Vipava springs (near Vipava) * Lijak karst spring * Wild Lake (a Vauclusian spring and small lake with a deep unexplored siphon) * Paradana Cave (a deep cave, with ice that was harvested and sold in the past)


Climate

The climate of the Trnovo Forest Plateau is defined by its elevation and orientation. The Trnovo Forest Plateau lies in a continental temperature zone. It receives an average of of precipitation per year. Differences in the quantity of precipitation differ little on a monthly basis. The greatest precipitation is in November () and the least in February (). The majority of winter precipitation is in the form of snow, especially at higher elevations. The
bora wind The bora is a northerly to north-easterly katabatic wind in areas near the Adriatic Sea. Similar nomenclature is used for north-eastern winds in other littoral areas of eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea basins. Name It is known in Greek as (' ...
is a typical weather phenomenon, blowing down from the plateau towards the sea with gusts often exceeding . The bora can cause considerable damage in the area, uprooting trees and tearing the roofs off of houses.


Water

Despite the abundant precipitation, karst plateaus have almost no water. The drainage divide is unclear because of the karst surface. The largest spring is that of the Hubelj River near Ajdovščina.


Vegetation

The Trnovo Forest Plateau is covered by mixed beech and fir forest (''Abieti-fagetum dinaricum''). The highest vegetation is on Little Mount Golak (), which is bare at the summit, below which grow dwarf willow ('' Salix sp.'') and mountain pine (''Pinus mugo''). Protected flora grows in the rocky crevices, including the Carniolan primrose (''Primula carniolica''). The share of forest is 75.5%, but this is increasing because of the afforestation of abandoned farmland. Poor accessibility has resulted in relatively good preservation of the landscape features. The highest peaks are overgrown with mountain pine or grass. Dinaric beech and fir forest grow at elevations between and . At lower elevations this transitions into Dinaric submontane beech forest. There is relatively little
shrubland Shrubland, scrubland, scrub, brush, or bush is a plant community characterized by vegetation dominated by shrubs, often also including grasses, herbs, and geophytes. Shrubland may either occur naturally or be the result of human activity. It m ...
.


Soil

Chromic
cambisol A Cambisol in the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB) is a soil in the beginning of soil formation. The horizon differentiation is weak. This is evident from weak, mostly brownish discolouration and/or structure formation in the soil pr ...
and rendzina have developed on Cretaceous and Jurassic limestone and on Triassic dolomite. More acidic soils are found only on limestone with chert. Due to karstification, the depth of regolith is very uneven. The substantial precipitation quickly erodes the soil, and it is also carried away by the bora wind in exposed locations.


Population

The plateau had a population of 4,534 in the 1991 census, and the population density was only , making the area one of the most sparsely populated in Slovenia. Only the western part is inhabited. The settlements were formed through more recent high-elevation colonization, and the dominant patterns are clustered villages and isolated farms. The age profile of the population is unfavorable.


Economy

In addition to forestry, farming is also an important economic activity. The basic farming activity is animal husbandry, especially raising cattle. The share of the farming population is 14.4%. Tourism is becoming increasingly important: the steep slopes of the plateau attract hikers, and some karst features also attract visitors, especially ice caves and sinkholes because of the vegetation associated with them.


References

{{Reflist


External links


Trnovo Forest Plateau at Geopedia
Karst plateaus of Slovenia Landscape parks in Slovenia Plateaus in the Slovene Littoral