On the Noll
On the Noll | ||
---|---|---|
View through the Siegtal to the mountain Auf der Noll |
||
height | 474.1 m above sea level NHN | |
location | between Salchendorf and Grissenbach ; District of Siegen-Wittgenstein , North Rhine-Westphalia ( Germany ) | |
Mountains | Siegerland Red-haired Vorhöhen | |
Dominance | 1.15 km → Heinenberg | |
Coordinates | 50 ° 52 '42 " N , 8 ° 10' 22" E | |
|
The mountain Auf der Noll between Salchendorf and Grissenbach in the North Rhine-Westphalian district of Siegen-Wittgenstein is 474.1 m above sea level. NHN high elevation in the Siegerland Rothaar Vorhöhen .
geography
location
The mountain Auf der Noll rises in the Siegerland Rothaar foothills near the border with the Rothaargebirge . It is located in the Sauerland-Rothaargebirge nature park on the ridge between the Sieg valley and that of the Werthenbach . Its summit is 980 m (as the crow flies ) north-northeast of the center of Salchendorf, 890 m south-south-east of that Grissenbach and about 2 km southeast of the center of Deuz ; they are all districts of Netphen . Its east-north-east neighbor elevation is the Heinenberg ( 530.7 m ), and its west-north-west foothills , on which a transmission tower stands, is called Halsberg ( 389 m ).
The mountain has two peaks - the 474.1 m high southeast crest with the mountain top and the 473 m high northwest crest. It is mostly forested, but there are several fields at the foot of the mountain. Parts of the landscape protection area Netphen ( CDDA no. 390136; designated 1985; 118.9074 km² ) are located on the survey .
Natural allocation
On the Noll belongs in the natural spatial main unit group Süderbergland (No. 33) and in the main unit Siegerland (331) to the sub-unit Siegerländer Rothaar-Vorhöhen (331.2).
Flowing waters
The small, approximately 300 m long Sieg - tributary Diederseifen rises on the north-western slope of the Auf der Noll mountain , the approximately 1000 m long Hellsbach flows northeast past it , which rises in the transition area between the Auf der Noll and Heinenberg mountains, and the approximately 2.3 rises southeast past it km long Schalkenbach .
Burial ground
In 1955, Iron Age ceramic fragments and Stone Age artifacts were discovered on the mountain. In addition, a burial ground and a burial mound were found during excavations.
hike
A widely ramified network of paths leads over the mountain, including the Rothaarsteig feeder from Deuz , which then leads over the Heinenberg and the Stiegelburg and meets the Rothaarsteig near the Lahnhof . Several paved farm roads lead along the mountain slopes.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Topographical Information Management, Cologne District Government, Department GEObasis NRW ( Notes )
- ↑ Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
- ↑ Heinz Fischer: Geographical Land Survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 124 Siegen. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1972. → Online map (PDF; 4.1 MB)