Abstract

Geodiversity is the variety of natural elements that are excluded from biodiversity, such as: geological, geomorphological, and soil features including their properties, systems, and relationships. Geodiversity assessment measures these features, emphasising the characteristics and physical fragility of the examined areas. In this study, a quantitative methodology has been applied in Bakony–Balaton UGGp, Hungary. The Geopark’s area was divided into 2 × 2 km cells in which geodiversity indices were calculated using various data: maps, spatial databases, and elevation models. However, data sources differ significantly in each country: thematic information may not be entirely public or does not have the appropriate scale and complexity. We proposed to use universal data—geomorphons and a watercourse network—derived from Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) to calculate geomorphological diversity. Making a balance between the base materials was also an aim of this research. As sources with different data densities are used, some abiotic elements may be overrepresented, while others seem to have less significance. The normalisation of thematic layers solves this problem: it gives a proportion to each sub-element and creates a balanced index. By applying worldwide accessible digital base data and statistical standardization methods, abiotic nature quantification may open new perspectives in geoconservation.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • We presented two new methodological approaches: the use of geomorphons and the normalisation of geodiversity values

  • The significance of the geomorphon concept in the production of a relief sub-index is that the use of Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) eliminates the country- and scale-dependent factor, making the results more comparable

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Summary

Introduction

Received: 5 July 2021Accepted: 20 August 2021Published: 22 August 2021Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).The quantitative assessment of biotic and abiotic nature elements is a relatively new research field in geosciences. Biology was the first to determine the concept ‘biological diversity—biodiversity’ at Rio Earth Summit in 1992 [1,2]. It is the variability of the living organisms of the Earth [1], or more precisely: ‘the diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems’ [2]. The introduction of the term ‘geodiversity’ came shortly after the

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