Frost hollows are concave landforms on the surface in which a distinctive temperature inversion often occurs and where temperatures can drop significantly below the temperatures in the surrounding environment under proper conditions. For a distinctive ground temperature inversion to occur in a period without direct sunlight, weather conditions must also be proper, therefore a clear sky as well as the absence of wind is especially important since only in such an atmosphere it is possible for the air above the ground to cool down so strongly and consequently also gathering and becoming still in the basins. The specific micro location of the frost hollows is not manifested only by reaching significantly lower temperatures but also in their specific microclimate itself which, additionally within short distances, significantly differs from the climate characteristics of the surrounding environment. Climatological statistics have been produced based on data acquired from several years of measuring three frost hollows on the Komna plateau, the reference measuring points at Dom Komna and at the Vogel meteorological station. The results of these climatological statistics are presented in detail in this Master’s Thesis, both descriptively as also graphically. Based on temperature indicators, the temperature characteristics and comparisons with the reference station at Dom na Komni and the ARSO station at Vogel are presented, for the frost hollows under examination. Moreover there are specifically considered individual cases of extreme temperature fluctuations and changes, great differences between frost hollows and the surrounding environment, extended periods of significant temperature inversion as well as cases of uninterrupted cooling with the emphasis on the weather conditions that led to these events.
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