Foiba

This article is about sinkholes. For killings, see Foiba massacres.
Simple scheme of a foiba

A foiba (plural: foibas or foibe) is a type of deep natural sinkhole, doline, or sink, and is a collapsed portion of bedrock above a void. Sinks may be a sheer vertical opening into a cave, or a shallow depression of many hectares. They are common in the Kras (Carso) region, a karstic plateau region shared by Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia.

History

The term "foiba" was used in the 1770s by Italian naturalist Alberto Fortis who wrote a number of books about karst of Dalmatia.[1] It is an Italian corruption of the Latin fovea, meaning "pit" or "chasm". They are indeed chasms excavated by water erosion, have the shape of an inverted funnel, and can be up to 200 metres (660 ft) deep. Such formations number in the hundreds in Istria.

In Carso areas, a doline, sink, or sinkhole is a closed depression draining underground. It can be cylindrical, conical, bowl-shaped or dish-shaped. The diameter ranges from a few to many hundreds of metres. The name "doline" comes from dolina, the Slovenian word for this very common feature. The term "foiba" may also refer to a deep wide chasm of a river at the place where it goes underground.[2]

See also

References

External links

Look up foiba in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.