World heritage plitvice lakes national park is a series of beautiful lakes, caves and waterfalls. There are 16 interlinked lakes between Mala Kapela Mountain and Pljesevica Mountain. The lakes are divided into two systems as upper lakes and lower lakes. There are so many species live in the forests. The waters flowing over the limestone and chalk have, over thousands of years, deposited travertine barriers, creating natural dams which in turn have created a series of beautiful lakes, caves and waterfalls. These geological processes continue today. The forests in the park are home to bears, wolves and many rare bird species. The site was accepted in a World Heritage Site in 1979.
Continent: Asia
Country: India
Category: Natural
Criterion: (III)(IV)
Date of Inscription: 1984
Structure of plitvice lakes
The Plitvice Lakes basin is a geomorphologic formation of biological origin, a karst river basin of limestone and dolomite, with approximately 20 lakes, created by the deposition of calcium carbonate precipitated in water through the agency of moss, algae and aquatic bacteria. These create strange, characteristic shapes and contain travertine-roofed and vaulted caves. The carbonates date from the Upper Trias, Juras and Cretaceous Ages and are up to 4,000 m thick. In order to maintain and preserve the natural characteristics of the lakes, the whole of surface and most of the subterranean drainage system has to be embraced by extending the original borders of the park. The new areas comprise layers of karstified limestone with dolomites of Jurassic age.
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