Uvala (landform)

Veliki Lubenovac, in the north of the Velebit mountain range, is a uvala of about 1 km in size

Uvala is originally a local toponym used by people in some regions in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia. In geosciences it denotes a closed karst depression, a terrain form usually of elongated or compound structure and of larger size than that of sinkholes. It is a morphological form frequently found in the outer Dinaric Alps anywhere between Slovenia and Greece, but large closed karst depressions are found on all continents in different landscapes and therefore uvala has become a globally established term. It is also used to distinguish such depressions from poljes, which are many square kilometres in size. Definitions of uvalas are often poorly empirically supported. "The coalescence of dolines" (sinkholes) is the dominant and most frequently found definition. However, because of the ongoing dissatisfaction with this definition, the term 'uvala' has often been belittled – occasionally it was even proposed that the term be given up altogether.

However, recent empirical research (~2009) revised poor mainstream definitions, stating that "…uvalas are large (in km scale) karst closed depressions of irregular or elongated plan form resulting from accelerated corrosion along major tectonically broken zones."[1] This is arguing for the "re-introducing of uvalas into modern karstology" – distinguishing them from dolines and poljes in size (typically) and "also in morphology and combination of genetic factors", which give them "a status of a particular karst relief form."[2]

  1. ^ Ćalić (2011), p. 41
  2. ^ Ćalić (2011), p. 32