
thumb|Livanjsko Polje in Bosnia is the largest polje in the world (Mount [[Dinara visible in the background).]] A polje, also called karst polje or karst field, is a large flat plain found in karstic geological regions of the world, with areas usually in the range of 5–400 km2 (2–154 sq mi). The name derives from the Slavic languages, where polje literally means 'field', whereas in English polje specifically refers to a karst plain or karst field.
thumb|Livanjsko Polje in Bosnia is the largest polje in the world (Mount [[Dinara visible in the background).]] A polje, also called karst polje or karst field, is a large flat plain found in karstic geological regions of the world, with areas usually in the range of 5–400 km2 (2–154 sq mi). The name derives from the Slavic languages, where polje literally means 'field', whereas in English polje specifically refers to a karst plain or karst field.
==Geology== A polje, in geological terminology, is a large, flat-floored depression within karst limestone, whose long axis develops in parallel with major structural trends and can become several miles (tens of kilometers) long. Superficial deposits tend to accumulate along the floor. Drainage may be either by surface watercourses (as an open polje) or by swallow holes (as a closed polje) or ponors. Usually, the ponors cannot transmit entire flood flows, so many poljes become wet-season lakes. The structure of some poljes is related to the geological structure, often fault lines, complex faults such as grabens and synclines, but others are purely the result of lateral dissolution and planation. The development of poljes is fostered by any blockage in the karst drainage.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).