Vrtiglavica, also Vrtoglavica (both from Slovene vrtoglavica 'vertigo'), is a karst shaft on the Kanin Plateau, part of the Kanin Mountains, Western Julian Alps, on the Slovene side of the border between Slovenia and Italy. It has the deepest known pitch in the world, at . The cave formed in a glaciokarst landscape; that is, a karst landscape that was subjected to Pleistocene glacial activity.
Vrtiglavica, also Vrtoglavica (both from Slovene vrtoglavica 'vertigo'), is a karst shaft on the Kanin Plateau, part of the Kanin Mountains, Western Julian Alps, on the Slovene side of the border between Slovenia and Italy. It has the deepest known pitch in the world, at . The cave formed in a glaciokarst landscape; that is, a karst landscape that was subjected to Pleistocene glacial activity.
Plunging straight through the high-karst roof of the Kanin Plateau at 1,900 m above sea-level, Vrtiglavica is no labyrinth but a single, near-cylindrical shaft that falls the cave's entire surveyed depth of 643 m. Glacial scouring during the Pleistocene stripped away the plateau's soil cover and enlarged pre-existing fissures, allowing melt-water to dissolve the crystalline Dachstein limestone along a tight joint bundle and sculpt the current glaciokarst pipe. Because the lip of the entrance opens directly onto bare karst pavement, rain and seasonal snowmelt drop unhindered into the void, creating a mist-filled freefall that is audible for several hundred metres around the doline rim.
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