I don't have specific context provided about the Pannonian Basin beyond "plain in Europe." To write an accurate overview based only on what you've given me, I cannot provide the detailed 2-sentence explanation you've requested, as I lack sufficient reliable information in your stated context to avoid inventing facts. If you could provide more detailed source material about the Pannonian Basin, I'd be happy to create the overview.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Geographic map of the Carpathian and Pannonian Basin in Central Europe The Carpathian and Pannonian Basins The Pannonian Basin, or Carpathian Basin is a large, mainly lowland area in southeastern Central Europe, briefly described as a sedimentary basin. It was the core territory of the historical Kingdom of Hungary.
Under the geopolitically changed conditions created by World War I and the ensuing Treaty of Trianon, the geomorphological term Pannonian Plain was also used for roughly the same region, referring to the lowlands in the area occupied by the Pannonian Sea during the Pliocene. However, Hungarian geographers consider the term "Pannonian Plain" not only unhistorical but also topographically highly erroneous. Regarding the name as such, they are arguing in terms of ancient history, namely that the northern and eastern boundary line of the namesake Roman province of Pannonia was formed by the River Danube, thus the Great Hungarian Plain was not part of the original Pannonia province.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).