dalbottnar
Dalbottnar are the low-lying floors of valleys, lying between the valley walls and forming the flat to gently inclined surfaces that make up the valley bottom. The term is used in Swedish geography and geomorphology to distinguish the valley floor from the slopes, ridges, and shoulders. In many landscapes, dalbottnar are shaped by a combination of fluvial processes (river transport and deposition) and glaciofluvial activity, especially in formerly glaciated regions.
Formation and composition: Valley bottoms develop as rivers erode their channels and deposit sediment, creating floodplains
Geomorphology and drainage: The bottom is typically flat or gently sloped, often with a network of wetland
Ecology and human use: Dalbottnar commonly host floodplain and riparian habitats, wetlands, forests at the margins,