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Naslov:Geomorphometry of Slovenia’s mountainous surface
Avtorji:ID Perko, Drago (Avtor)
Datoteke:URL URL - Izvorni URL, za dostop obiščite https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-99017-5_4
 
.pdf PDF - Predstavitvena datoteka, prenos (4,75 MB)
MD5: 7A1E552F947A9546CB2F1A1EAB1FBED2
 
Jezik:Angleški jezik
Tipologija:1.16 - Samostojni znanstveni sestavek ali poglavje v monografski publikaciji
Organizacija:Logo ZRC SAZU - Znanstvenoraziskovalni center Slovenske akademije znanosti in umetnosti
Povzetek:Geomorphometry is the science of measuring land surfaces. The basic geomorphometric indicators include surface height, slope, and aspect. Their values were calculated for all of Slovenia and separately for its mountainous and non-mountainous surface, using a 5-m digital elevation model. Slovenia’s average surface height is 556.4 m, its average surface slope is 16.5°, and its average surface aspect measured from the south (0°) to the north (180°) is 84.8°. The average height of its non-mountainous surface is 320.0 m and that of its mountainous surface is 735.5 m, the average slope of its non-mountainous and mountainous surface is 9.5° and 21.8°, respectively, and the average aspect of its non-mountainous and mountainous surface is 81.2° and 87.5°, respectively. Slovenia’s lowest point is at 0 m on the coast of the Gulf of Trieste and the lowest point of its mountainous surface is at 54 m at the bottom of the Soča Valley north of Nova Gorica. The highest point of Slovenia and its mountainous surface is at 2,864 m at the top of Mount Triglav. Geomorphometric indicators help design landform typologies. Slovenian geographers have produced five so far: the first in 1935 and the last in 2019. The one created in 1992 is the only typology with a distinct geomorphometric character and the first computer-designed one. It divides Slovenia into 195 geomorphometric units and seven geomorphometric types. Among all Slovenian regions, Haloze has the roughest surface and the Mura Plain has the least rough surface, and among the mountainous regions, the roughest surface is characteristic of the Idrija Hills and the least rough surface can be found in the Dry Carniola and Dobrepolje region.
Ključne besede:digital elevation model, height, slope, aspect, geomorphometric unit, geomorphometric type, landform, landscape
Status publikacije:Objavljeno
Verzija publikacije:Objavljena publikacija
Datum objave:01.03.2026
Leto izida:2026
Št. strani:Str. 57-77
PID:20.500.12556/DiRROS-28681 Novo okno
UDK:911:551.4.035(497.4)
DOI:10.1007/978-3-031-99017-5_4 Novo okno
COBISS.SI-ID:270851843 Novo okno
Avtorske pravice:© The Author(s) 2026
Opomba:Raziskovalni podatki, na katerih temelji objava, so na voljo v članku.
Datum objave v DiRROS:28.03.2026
Število ogledov:41
Število prenosov:9
Metapodatki:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
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Gradivo je del monografije

Naslov:Discourses on mountains of Montenegro and Slovenia
Uredniki:Matija Zorn, Olga Pelcer-Vujačić, Peter Mikša
Kraj izida:Cham
Založnik:Springer
Leto izida:2026
ISBN:978-3-031-99016-8
COBISS.SI-ID:267673091 Novo okno
Naslov zbirke:Historical geography and geosciences (Print)
ISSN zbirke:2520-1379

Gradivo je financirano iz projekta

Financer:ARIS - Javna agencija za znanstvenoraziskovalno in inovacijsko dejavnost Republike Slovenije
Številka projekta:P6-0101
Naslov:Geografija Slovenije

Licence

Licenca:CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, Creative Commons Priznanje avtorstva-Nekomercialno-Brez predelav 4.0 Mednarodna
Povezava:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.sl
Opis:Najbolj omejujoča licenca Creative Commons. Uporabniki lahko prenesejo in delijo delo v nekomercialne namene in ga ne smejo uporabiti za nobene druge namene.
Začetek licenciranja:01.03.2026
Vezano na:Text and Data Mining valid from 2026-01-01 Version of Record valid from 2026-03-01

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