ABSTRACT

Karst is the German form of the Indo-European word kar, which means rock. The Italian term is carso, and the Slovenian kras. In Slovenia, kras or krš means ‘bare stony ground’ and is also a rugged region in the west of the country. In geomorphology, karst is terrain in which soluble rocks are altered above and below ground by the dissolving action of water and that bears distinctive characteristics of relief and drainage (Jennings 1971, 1). It usually refers to limestone terrain characteristically lacking surface drainage, possessing a patchy and thin soil cover, containing many enclosed depressions, and supporting a network of subterranean features, including caves and grottoes. However, all rocks are soluble to some extent in water, and karst is not confined to the most soluble rock types. Karst may form in evaporites such as gypsum and halite, in silicates such as sandstone and quartzite, and in some basalts and granites under favourable conditions (Table 8.1). Karst features may also form by other means – weathering, hydraulic action, tectonic movements, meltwater, and the evacuation of molten rock (lava). These features are called pseudokarst as solution is not the dominant process in their development (Table 8.1).