Frillenseebach

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Frillenseebach
Older name: Forellenbach
Data
location Chiemgau Alps

Bavaria

River system Danube
Drain over Großwaldbach  → Rote Traun  → Traun  → Alz  → Inn  → Danube  → Black Sea
discharge at the northwest end of the Frillensee
47 ° 46 ′ 1 ″  N , 12 ° 48 ′ 57 ″  E
Source height approx.  922  m above sea level NHN
muzzle At the Forsthaus Adlgaß from the left in the Großwaldbach Coordinates: 47 ° 46 '29 "  N , 12 ° 47' 49"  E 47 ° 46 '29 "  N , 12 ° 47' 49"  E
Mouth height approx.  789  m above sea level NHN
Height difference approx. 133 m
Bottom slope approx. 49 ‰
length approx. 2.7 km
Catchment area approx. 4 km²

The Frillenseebach is a brook over 2.5 km long in the municipality of Inzell in the Upper Bavarian district of Traunstein , which flows into the Großwaldbach from the left at the Adlgaß forester's house . In the 19th century it was called the trout stream .

geography

course

The Frillenseebach is the outflow of the 4.1 hectare Frillensee in the eastern Inzell municipality at an altitude of 922  m above sea level. NHN , which lies at the northern foot of the Zwiesel under the dark wall. At the north-north-west end of the lake, which itself has only a few inflows, none of which is even 300 meters long, the stream emerges and then crosses the clearing around the Gaßlalm for almost half a kilometer on a north-north-west course, and then in the forest itself Direction to flow on. After about half of its length, it swings to the west. On its last half kilometer, it runs on a south-westerly route past the Adlgaß forester's lodge, where at the end of the TS 40 district road it crosses the adjacent forest path and on the other side at about 789  m above sea level. NHN flows into the upper Großwaldbach from the left .

The Frillenseebach is about 2.7 km long and has an average bed gradient of about 49 ‰.

Catchment area

The approximately 4.0 km² catchment area of ​​the Frillenbach encompasses the western part of the northern slope of the Staufen mountain range below its highest peak, Zwiesels ( 1781.6  m above sea level ). The morphologically dominant, west-east ridge line of the Staufen is its most important watershed, behind which the Stabach drains in the south over the Weißenbach to the upper Saalach . West of the Frillenbach, shorter sloping streams run below it to the Großwaldbach, whose upper course itself drains the terrain beyond the northern watershed. The runoff of the eastern Staufen northern slope is in turn fed to the Saalach by the Aufhamer Bach and the Leitengraben via the Stoißer Ache .

The area belonging to the municipality of Inzell is predominantly forested, the only settlement areas in it are the Gaßlalm near the Frillensee and the Adlgaß tavern at the mouth. At the top of the Staufen there is bare rock, and from its secondary peak Zennokopf ( 1756  m above sea level ) a Mur runs down to near the Frillensee, at the end of which the longest of its short tributaries rises at the Goldnen Brünndl.

In the Hormann regional survey, the greater part of the catchment area south of the Gaßlalm – Adlgaß line belongs to the Western Salzburg Limestone Alps , the northern part to the Western Salzburg Flysch Alps .

geology

The summit section of the Staufen consists of Wetterstein limestone, with layers of Reichenhall extending down to the Frillensee . The Frillenseebach itself runs in the Worm Age young moraine . A fault line runs from the southeast over the Staufen and ends at the Frillensee. It is assumed that a disturbance that crosses the upper reaches and traverses the west-east just below it.

Individual evidence

BayernAtlas ("BA")

Official online waterway map with a suitable section and the layers used here: Course and catchment area of ​​the Frillenseebach
General introduction without default settings and layers: BayernAtlas of the Bavarian State Government ( notes )

  1. On the background layer historical map .
  2. Height according to the blue lettering on the official map background layer .
  3. Height queried on the official map background layer (right click).
  4. Length measured on the official map background layer .
  5. ↑ Catchment area measured on the official map background layer .
  6. ↑ The area of ​​the lake measured on the official map background layer .
  7. Geology according to the layer geological map 1: 500,000 .

Others

  1. ^ Klaus Hormann: Geographical land survey: The natural space units on sheet 190/196 Salzburg. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1978. →  Online map (PDF; 6.1 MB)

literature

Web links