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Pannonian Basin

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The Pannonian Basin or Carpathian Basin[1][2][3][4] is a large basin in Central Europe. The basin forms a topographically discrete unit set in the European landscape, surrounded by imposing geographic boundaries that have created a fairly unified cultural area that looks more towards the south and east than to the north and west. The rivers Danube and Tisza divide the basin roughly in half.

The geomorphological term Pannonian Plain is more widely used for roughly the same region though with a somewhat different sense (meaning only the lowlands).

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[edit] Terminology

The term Carpathian Basin (named like this because of the long Carpathian border) has been translated from Hungarian literature, while the South Slavic languages, as well as Slovak and German, use the corresponding terms of Pannonian Basin.[5] In English, both names can be used.

In Hungarian, the basin is known as Kárpát-medence, in Serbian Панонски басен, in Bosnian as Panonska nizija, in Croatian as Panonska nizina, in Slovak as Panónska kotlina, in Slovenian as Panonska kotlina and in German as Pannonisches Becken.

In the English language Pannonian Basin or Carpathian Basin are generally not used as geographical terms. Instead, the term Pannonian Plain is used in most sources, which refers to the lowland parts of the Pannonian Basin as well as those of some adjoining regions like Lower Austria, Moravia, Bosnia.

In Hungarian geographical literature various subdivisions of the Carpathian Mountains (Inner Western Carpathians, Inner Eastern Carpathians, Southern Carpathians, Western Carpathians and Transylvanian Plateau) are also considered parts of the Carpathian Basin on the basis of traditional geopolitical divisions.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Eldridge M. Moores, Rhodes Whitmore Fairbridge (1997). Encyclopedia of European and Asian Regional Geology. Springer. ISBN 0412740400, 9780412740404. 
  2. ^ Adami Jordan, Peter Jordan, Milan Orožen Adamič (2007). Exonyms and the International Standardisation of Geographical Names: Approaches Towards the Resolution of an Apparent Contradiction. LIT Verlag Berlin-Hamburg-Münster. pp. 240. ISBN 3825800350, 9783825800352. 
  3. ^ George Walter Hoffman, Christopher Shane Davies (1983). A Geography of Europe: Problems and Prospects. Wiley. pp. 647. ISBN 0471897086, 9780471897088. 
  4. ^ George Walter Hoffman, Nels August Bengtson (1953). A Geography of Europe. Ronald Press Co.. pp. 757. 
  5. ^ [1]

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