Transylvanian Plateau

The Transylvanian Plateau (Romanian: Podișul Transilvaniei; Hungarian: Erdélyi-medence) is a plateau in central Romania.

Description

The plateau lies within and takes its name from the historical region of Transylvania, and is almost entirely surrounded by the Eastern, Southern and Romanian Western branches of the Carpathian Mountains. The area includes the Transylvanian Plain.

It is improperly called a plateau, for it does not possess extensive plains, but is formed of a network of valleys of various size, ravines and canyons, united together by numerous small mountain ranges, which attain a height of 150–250 m (490–820 ft) above the altitude of the valley.[1]

Relief features

The plateau consists of two relatively concentric areas.

  • Towards the outside of the area, there is a folded structure (more pronounced in the east and slightly weaker in the south and west). In contact with the submontane structures, this forms an area of submontane depressions in the west and south, and a sequence of depressions and hills similar to the Subcarpathians in the east.This marginal area is therefore formed of submontane depressions (Huedin, Almaș-Agrij, Iara, Bistrița, Vălenii de Mureș, Gurghiu, Sovata-Praid, Odorhei, Homoroadelor, Hoghiz, Făgăraș, Sibiu), intercolline (Dumitra, Voivodeni, Măgherani-Atid, Cristuru Secuiesc), depression areas (Orăștie, Alba Iulia – Turda) and hills (relatively isolated hilly areas – in the west and units such as the Bistrița Hills, Culmea Șieului, the Transylvanian Subcarpathians – in the east).
  • In the center, there is a plateau area (the Transylvanian Plateau) with quasi-horizontal or soft structures that are vaulted in places in the form of domes. The central area consists of the Someșan Plateau, the Transylvanian Plain (with a hilly landscape and typical hill elevations, it is called a "plain" due to its agricultural land use) and the Târnavelor Plateau (with the subunits of the Târnavelor Plateau itself and the Hârtibaciului Plateau, together with the Secașelor Plateau in the south).

Climate features

The plateau has a continental climate. Temperature varies a great deal in the course of a year, with warm summers contrasted by very cold winters. Vast forests cover parts of the plateau and the mountains. The mean elevation is 300–500 m (980–1,640 ft).

Subdivisions

The Transylvanian Plateau is divided into three areas:

  • Someș Plateau (Podișul Someșan or Podișul Someșelor); the northern part.
  • Transylvanian Plain (Câmpia Transilvaniei); the central part.
  • Târnava Plateau (Podișul Târnavelor); the southern part.

The Transylvanian Plain is also hilly (400–600 m), but because the area is almost completely cultivated it is called a plain.[2]

The Transylvanian Basin

The Transylvanian Basin (Romanian: Depresiunea colinară a Transilvaniei) includes the Transylvanian Plateau and the peripheral areas towards the Carpathian Mountains, which have a different character than the plateau.[2] The basin is the main production site of Romania's methane. It also contains a salt dome.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Transylvanian Mountains". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 212.
  2. ^ a b "Depresiunea Colinară a Transilvaniei, Podișul Transilvaniei". www.gimnaziu.info (in Romanian). Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  3. ^ Pene, C.; Coltoi, O.; Grigorescu, S. (4 June 2012). "Badenian Evaporite Evolution and Methane Entrapment in the Transylvanian Basin". 74th EAGE Conference and Exhibition incorporating EUROPEC 2012. doi:10.3997/2214-4609.20148461. ISBN 978-90-73834-27-9.

46°30′N 24°30′E / 46.500°N 24.500°E / 46.500; 24.500