Frankenburger Redlbach
Frankenburger Redlbach Redlbach (official); Edter Bach (upper course) |
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Data | ||
Water code | AT : 2-122-152-072-028 | |
location | Hausruckviertel , Upper Austria , Austria | |
River system | Danube | |
Drain over | Vöckla → Ager → Traun → Danube → Black Sea | |
source | on the Hengstberg in Hausrucks 48 ° 6 ′ 24 ″ N , 13 ° 27 ′ 16 ″ E |
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Source height | at 633 m above sea level A. | |
muzzle | at Redl in Vöckla coordinates: 48 ° 1 ′ 23.79 " N , 13 ° 30 ′ 25.4" E 48 ° 1 ′ 23.79 " N , 13 ° 30 ′ 25.4" E |
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Mouth height | 470 m above sea level A. | |
Height difference | 163 m | |
Bottom slope | 13 ‰ | |
length | 12.7 km | |
Catchment area | approx. 59 km² | |
Discharge at the Redl A Eo gauge : 58.1 km². Location: 570 m above the mouth |
NNQ (08/03/1999) MNQ 1976–2010 MQ 1976–2010 Mq 1976–2010 MHQ 1976–2010 HHQ (08/06/1985) |
160 l / s 350 l / s 1.2 m³ / s 20.7 l / (s km²) 40 m³ / s 129 m³ / s |
Communities | Waldzell , Redleiten , Frankenburg , Vöcklamarkt | |
official coordinate ; Edter Bachhas the HZB code 2-122-152-072-028-001 |
The Redlbach , also Frankenburger Redlbach or Frankenburger Redl , is a larger stream with a length of about 13 kilometers in the Hausruckviertel in Upper Austria .
course
It rises as Edter Bach on the southern slope of the Hengstberg in the main ridge of the Hausruck and Kobernaußerwald Zug north of Redleiten in the municipality of Waldzell , on the watershed to the catchment area of the Inn ( Ach , Oberach ) to the Traun .
It flows first to the southeast (from "Edter Bach" one speaks to Winkl / Dorf ), then to the south through the wide Frankenburger Talung, passes the place Frankenburg am Hausruck , and flows from the left into the Vöckla at Redl (municipality Vöcklamarkt ) in the Vöcklatal which flows to the Ager .
Water flow
The mean discharge at the Redl gauge is 1.20 m³ / s, which corresponds to a discharge rate of 20.7 l / s · km². The Redlbach has a winter pluvial discharge regime without extreme fluctuations, the monthly mean of the month of March with the highest discharge is 1.92 m³ / s, which is about twice as high as that of the month of October with the lowest discharge, with 0.85 m³ / s.
The width in the lower reaches is 5 meters.
nature
The stream is partly natural with meanders and branches, partly regulated, with a backwater area. Due to its excellent quality class I water, the water is rich in brown and rainbow trout . With a strip of 50 meters on both banks, the Redlbach is a protected landscape area.
Surname
As with the other streams of the same name coming from the southern slope of the Hausruck or Kobernaußerwald, the name “Redl” is attributed to the reddish color of the water.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Information according to DORIS → Topic Water & Geology , Water Layer (corresponding to the HZB numbers and the detailed catchment areas).
- ↑ beeline about 10 km
- ^ A b c Federal Ministry for Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water Management (ed.): Hydrographisches Jahrbuch von Österreich 2010. 118th volume. Vienna 2012, p. OG 176, PDF (12.6 MB) on bmlrt.gv.at (yearbook 2010)
- ^ Austrian map 1: 50,000
- ↑ Allocation to Hausruck (eastern part of the train) or Kobernaußerwald (western part) is largely arbitrary, their demarcation is seen somewhere here in the room, partly directly on the Hengstberg itself: For example, the mountain group breakdown according to Trimmel Hundstalbach - Kammhöhe am [Hamberg (Hausruck and Kobernaußerwald ) | Hamberg] east of Kote 722 - Ertlmoos ; as the watershed Ager / Traun (Danube below Jochenstein ) to Inn (Danube above J.) between Schwemmbach and Redl and then further over the Hengstberg eastwards; or scenic Frankenburg - Kobernaußerwaldwarte - Kobernaußen
- ↑ Waldzell is located north of the Hausruck and Kobernaußerwald train, but on the Hengstberg it has municipal area on the ridge south of the watershed. The official source channel then runs for 50 meters only in the Frankenburg area and then forms the border between Redleiten and Frankenburg. All three municipalities have shares in the source boiler at Hengsberg.
- ↑ Helmut Mader, Theo Steidl, Reinhard Wimmer: Discharge regime of Austrian rivers. Contributions to a nationwide river typology. Federal Environment Agency, Monographs Volume 82, Vienna 1996, p. 101 ( PDF; 14.7 MB )
- ^ Province of Upper Austria - Protected Areas Vöckla-Agertal
- ^ Franz Rosenauer: About the water in Upper Austria. In: Yearbook of the Upper Austrian Museum Association. 84th Volume, Linz 1932, p. 380, online (PDF; 3.7 MB) in the forum OoeGeschichte.at.