Glaciokarst landscapes form through interactions between ice and certain types of rock, like
limestone,
gypsum, or
dolomite, that are able to dissolve in water. When glaciers move over the land, they shape it by carving valleys and other glacial features. As it acquires carbon dioxide, meltwater from these glaciers forms a weak acid that can dissolve these specific rocks, eventually leading to cave formation. Over time, the combination of glacial sculpting and rock dissolution produces distinct landforms such as sinkholes and caves within the regions affected by
glaciers.
Velež Mountain provides an example of glaciokarst where karstic terrain has been significantly affected by glacial processes during the
Pleistocene epoch. This landscape includes
valley glaciers and a
plateau glacier, primarily located on the northern slopes. The northern slopes exhibit features shaped by glacial erosion, presenting
cirques, pavements, and
roche moutonnées covered with small-scale karst features while in the lower regions of the Velež Mountain, significant moraine ridges,
lateral moraines, breach-lobe moraines, and smaller recessional moraines formed, varying in their composition and height. The absence of valley discharge and the presence of indicators of glacial erosion hint at a pattern of vertical drainage of sub-glacial waters into the karst landscape. The outwash fans that filled some hollow areas displayed a change in the kind of sediment they contained, from rough near the ice margin to finer material further away. == Characteristics of glaciokarst ==