Handbook of the natural spatial structure of Germany

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The Handbook of the Natural Spatial Structure of Germany is a multi-part book project of the former Federal Institute for Regional Studies , which was commissioned by the Federal Republic of Germany and which was dedicated to the Germany-wide division into natural areas and in which around 400 authors, mostly geographers, were involved.

description

The actual manual , with a total of eight books over 1300 pages , was published between 1953 and 1962. The editors were the institute director Emil Meynen and the project manager Josef Schmithüsen , reinforced by four other co-editors ( Johannes F. Gellert , Ernst Neef , Heinrich Müller-Miny , Joachim Heinrich Schultze ) from the 6th  delivery . In addition to the then Federal Republic of Germany, the GDR area was also completely covered. The area of ​​the then two German states was subdivided into a total of 90 two-digit, so-called main unit groups , which in turn were divided into a maximum of 10 three-digit main units . A map on a scale of 1: 1,000,000 was published for the book series.

The project did not end with the publication of the manual describing the main unit; The book series Geographische Landesaufnahme 1: 200,000 - Natural Spatial Structure of Germany followed over decades , which subdivides the main units more finely so that the smallest units described have one to three decimal places, depending on the landscape. The single sheets under the respective subtitle The natural space units on sheet <consecutive numbering; Name of a place within the map section> each consist of a map on a scale of 1: 200,000 with a circumference of one degree of longitude and half a degree of latitude and a paperback with between 40 and 100 pages. In peripheral areas the width increases. U. up to 1 ° 40 'degrees of longitude.

The book series 1: 200,000 was also originally intended to cover the area of ​​the GDR. However, apart from the sheet margins, only one regular map sheet has appeared in their area. Ultimately, a sheet of Berlin was planned (but never published), which should be oriented precisely to the city limits - and not, like the other map sheets, to the systematic longitudes and latitudes. Apart from that, a few West German map sheets in the north and south-east have never appeared.

Manual

The continuously numbered manual, which was published by the institute itself (up to the 6th delivery in Remagen, from then on Bad Godesberg) consists of the following parts:

  • Handbook of the natural spatial structure of Germany
    • First delivery 1953 - Introduction, main unit groups 01 to 06 (Alps and Pre-Alps); Pages 1-136
    • Natural division of Germany (with elevation layers) 1954 - Map 1: 1,000,000
    • Second delivery 1955 - main unit groups 07-15 (south-west German step country); Pages 137-258
    • Third delivery 1956 - main unit groups 16–23 (High and Upper Rhine; low mountain range west of the Upper Rhine Rift); Pages 259-350
    • 4th and 5th delivery 1957 - main unit groups 24–38 (western and central low mountain range threshold); Pages 351-608
    • 6. Delivery 1959 - main unit groups 39–57 (Eastern Central Uplands plus foreland, Lower Rhine and North Westphalia); Pages 609-882
    • Administrative border map of Germany with natural spatial structure 1960 - updated map 1: 1,000,000
    • 7th delivery 1961 - main unit groups 58-76 (northwest German lowlands); Pages 883-1090
    • 8. Delivery 1961 - main unit groups 77-90 (northeast German lowlands); Pages 1091-1218
    • 9. Delivery 1962 - List of publications, maps and authors; Register; Pages 1219-1340

For the individual main unit groups, see large natural regions of Germany .

Single sheets

By default, the maps are one degree wide and half a degree high, which corresponds to an area of ​​3500 km² (55th degree of latitude) to a good 4000 km² (48th degree of latitude). Maps in the interior of Germany go from x ° 20 'to (x + 1) ° 20' east longitude and from y ° 00 'to (y-1) ° 30' or from y ° 30 'to y ° 00' north Width. This means that the map section is in A3 format, the map including the legend in A2 .

In border areas, the eastern longitude has been extended by 5-40 'if necessary, the northern latitude by 5-15'. The latter cards are called, even if they are z. B. are only enlarged by less than ten percent, double pages and have two consecutive digits separated by a slash. Only ten of the double pages and the legend take up a section of more than DIN A2. As a result, the widest map sheet (Cologne / Aachen, southernmost sheet with 5/3 degrees of longitude) grows to an area of ​​about 6400 km², the two highest sheets (Lindau / Oberstdorf and Kaufbeuren / Mittenwald, 3/4 degree of latitude) to about 6100 km².

The Karlsruhe, Stuttgart and Ulm papers were published by Reise- und Verkehrsverlag Stuttgart as early as 1949 to 1952, i.e. before the first delivery of the manual was published . Most of the single sheets - a total of 51, including a new edition of the sheet Stuttgart, which originally consisted almost entirely of a map and a legend - were published between 1959 and 1974 by the self-publisher Bad Godesberg , which also published the later sheets. Six more sheets were published between 1977 and 1981, the last six between 1987 and 1994, until the Institut für Landeskunde was dissolved. These 65 individual sheets are supplemented by an essay on Blatt Bamberg, published in 2004 in the communications of the Franconian Geographical Society .

Sofie Meisel (-Jahn) was by far the most “hard-working” processor of the early days. Between 1959 and 1964 she almost single-handedly recorded Lower Saxony and northern Westphalia in a total of twelve and a half sheets . The second most frequent and by far the longest-standing editor was Hansjörg Dongus , who wrote the Göppingen volume as early as 1961, significantly revised and supplemented the Stuttgart sheet six years later, in order to finally write three of the very last map sheets in the foothills of the Alps between 1991 and 1994. Of the total of 3432 pages (with sheet Bamberg 3480 pages - an average of 53 per single sheet), Meisel wrote 516 (40 of which were after preliminary work by another editor) and Dongus wrote 379 (minus the outlines adopted from the original edition of sheet Stuttgart). The shortest single sheet (Bremerhaven) has 18 pages, while the sheets Saarbrücken (154 pages) and Munich (128 pages in small letters) are comparatively extensive.

The following table gives an overview of the 65 or 66 single sheets (apart from Karlsruhe, Ulm and Bamberg, each self-published by Bad Godesberg , “ne” = not published ); the links "sheet XY" lead to the list, where all the complete author names are listed:

NB \ OIL 5 ° 40'-6 ° 20 ' 06 ° 20 '- 07 ° 20' 07 ° 20 '- 08 ° 20' 08 ° 20 '- 09 ° 20' 09 ° 20 '- 10 ° 20' 10 ° 20 '- 11 ° 20' 11 ° 20 '- 12 ° 20' 12 ° 20 '- 13 ° 20' 13 ° 20 '- 14 ° 20' 14 ° 20 '- 15 ° 20'
55 ° 00 '
-
54 ° 30'


Sheet 8
Westerland
(ne)
Sheet 9
Tondern
(ne)
Sheet 10
Schleswig
(ne)
Sheet 11
Westermarkelsdorf
from 54 ° 35 '
Sheet 12
Wiek
(ne)
Sheet 13
Sagard
(ne)
54 ° 30 '
-
54 ° 00'
Sheet 22
(only
Heligoland)
Sheet 22 46 S.
Husum
(G. Richter 1962)
Sheet 23
Kiel
(ne)
Sheet 24 26 S.
Eutin
(B. Schwenzer 1974)
Sheet 25
Rostock
(ne)
Sheet 26
Stralsund
(ne)
Sheet 27
Greifswald
(ne)
54 ° 00 '
-
53 ° 30'
Sheet 37
north
from 6 ° 40 '
Sheet 38 21 S.
Wilhelmshaven
(S. Meisel 1961)
Sheet 39 18 S.
Bremerhaven
(S. Meisel 1962)
Sheet 40
Hamburg (North)
(ne)
Sheet 41
Lübeck
(ne)
Sheet 42
Schwerin
(ne)
Sheet 43
Neubrandenburg
(ne)
Sheet 44
Swinoujscie
(ne)
Sheet 45
Wollin
(ne)
53 ° 30 '
-
53 ° 00'
Sheet 54
Emden
from 6 ° 40 '
Sheet 55 40 S.
Oldenburg
(S. Meisel 1962)
Sheet 56 28 S.
Bremen
(S. Meisel 1961)
Sheet 57 44 S.
Hamburg (Süd)
(S. Meisel 1964)
Sheet 58 43 S.
Lüneburg
(W. Meibeyer 1980)
Sheet 59
Ludwigslust
(ne)
Sheet 60
Neustrelitz
(ne)
Sheet 61
Prenzlau
(ne)
Sheet 62
Stettin
(ne)
53 ° 00 '
-
52 ° 30'
Sheet 70
lengths
from 6 ° 40 '
Sheet 71 36 S.
Cloppenburg
(S. Meisel 1959)
Sheet 72 29 S.
Nienburg (Weser)
(S. Meisel 1959)
Sheet 73 37 S.
Celle
(S. Meisel 1960)
Sheet 74 46 S.
Salzwedel
(W. Meibeyer 1970)
Sheet 75 31 S.
Stendal
(H. Claus 1964)
Sheet 76
Berlin NW
(ne)
Sheet 77
Berlin NO
(ne)
Sheet 78
Berlin NO-E
(ne)
52 ° 30 '
-
52 ° 00'
Sheet 83
Bentheim
from 6 ° 40 '
Sheet 84 66 S.
Osnabrück
(S. Meisel 1961)
Sheet 85 50 S.
Minden
(S. Meisel 1959)
Sheet 86 60 p.
Hannover
(S. Meisel 1960)
Sheet 87 38 S.
Braunschweig
(T. Müller 1962)
Sheet 88
Magdeburg
(ne)
Sheet 89
Berlin SW
(ne)
Sheet 90
Berlin SO
(ne)
Sheet 91
Frankfurt (Oder)
(ne)
52 ° 00 '
-
51 ° 30'
Sheet 95
Kleve

Sheet 96 75 S.
Wesel
(W. v. Kürten 1977)
Sheet 97 47 S.
Münster
(S. Meisel 1960)
Sheet 98 40 S.
Detmold
(S. Meisel 1959)
Sheet 99 36 S.
Göttingen
(J. Hövermann 1963)
Sheet 100 37 S.
Halberstadt
(J. Spönemann 1970)
Sheet 101
Dessau
(ne)
Sheet 102
Wittenberg
(ne)
Sheet 103
Lübbenau
(ne)
Sheet 104
Guben
(ne)
51 ° 30 '
-
51 ° 00'
Sheet 108
Erkelenz

Sheet 109 55 p.
Düsseldorf
(div. 1963)
Sheet 110 80 S.
Arnsberg
(M. Bürgener 1969)
Sheet 111 94 S.
Arolsen
(M. Bürgener 1963)
Sheet 112 108 S.
Kassel
(H.-J. Klink 1969)
Sheet 113
Sondershausen
(ne)
Sheet 114
Hall
(ne)
Sheet 115
Leipzig
(ne)
Sheet 116
Dresden
(ne)
Sheet 117
Görlitz
(ne)
51 ° 00 '
-
50 ° 30'
Sheet 122
Aachen

Sheet 123 52 p.
Cologne
(E. Glässer 1978)
Sheet 124 36 S.
Siegen
(H. Fischer 1972)
Sheet 125 32 S.
Marburg
(G. Sandner 1960)
Sheet 126 38 S.
Fulda
(W. Röll 1969)
Sheet 127
Gotha
(ne)
Sheet 128
Plauen (North)
(ne)
Sheet 129
Chemnitz
(ne)
Sheet 130
Aussig
(ne)
Sheet 131
Görlitz-S
(ne)
50 ° 30 '
-
50 ° 00'
Sheet 136
Cochem-W
from 6 ° 05 '
Sheet 137 39 S.
Cochem
(div. 1974)
Sheet 138 82 S.
Koblenz
(div. 1971)
Sheet 139 35 p.
Frankfurt a. M.
(B. Schwenzer 1967)
Sheet 140 43 S.
Schweinfurt
(B. Schwenzer 1968)
Sheet 141 42 S.
Coburg
(H. Späth 1987)
Sheet 142
Plauen (South)
(ne)
Sheet 143 Chemn.-S /
Plauen (South) -E
(ne)
50 ° 00 '
-
49 ° 30'
Sheet 148
Mettendorf
z. T. from 6 ° 08 '
Sheet 149 68 S.
Trier
(O. Werle 1974)
Sheet 150 39 S.
Mainz
(H. Uhlig 1964)
Sheet 151 61 S.
Darmstadt
(O. Klausing 1967)
Sheet 152 45 S.
Würzburg
(div. 1963)
Sheet 153 48 S.
Bamberg
(K.-A. Habbe 2004)
Sheet 154
Bayreuth
(ne)
Sheet 155
Bayreuth-E
(ne)
49 ° 30 '
-
49 ° 00'


Sheet 159 154 S.
Saarbrücken
(H. Schneider 1972)
Sheet 160 47 p.
Landau id Pfalz
(A. Pemöller 1969)
Sheet 161 24 p.
Karlsruhe
(J. Schmithüsen 1952)
Sheet 162 58 S.
Rothenburg
(W.-D. Sick 1962)
Sheet 163 33 p.
Nürnberg
(F. Tichy 1973)
Sheet 164 64 S.
Regensburg
(D. J. Manske 1981)
Sheet 165 86 S.
Cham
(K. M.-H. 1973)
Sheet 166
Cham-E
z. T. to 13 ° 25 '
49 ° 00 '
-
48 ° 30'




Sheet 169 31 S.
Rastatt
(H. Fischer 1967)
Sheet 170 76 p.
Stuttgart
(v. A. H. Dongus 1967)
Sheet 171 54 S.
Göppingen
(H. Dongus 1961)
Sheet 172 38 S.
Nördlingen
(R. Jätzold 1962)
Sheet 173 30 S.
Ingolstadt
(div 1990)
Sheet 174 88 S.
Straubing
(div. 1967)
Sheet 175 50 S.
Passau
(U. Bodemüller 1971)
48 ° 30 '
-
48 ° 00'




Sheet 177 48 S.
Offenburg
(div 1967)
Sheet 178 61 S.
Sigmaringen
(F. Huttenlocher 1959)
Sheet 179 39 S.
Ulm
(H. Graul 1952)
Sheet 180 24 p.
Augsburg
(H. Graul 1962)
Sheet 181 128 S.
Munich
(G. Michler 1994)
Sheet 182 47 S.
Burghausen
(P. Weichhart 1979)
Sheet 183
Burghsn.-E
to 13 ° 45 '
48 ° 00 '
-
47 ° 30'




Sheet 185 47 p.
Freiburg i. Br.
(G. Reichelt 1964)
Sheet 186 44 S.
Konstanz
(A. G. Benzing 1964)
Sheet 187 94 S.
Lindau
(H. Dongus 1991)
Sheet 188 87 S.
Kaufbeuren
(H. Dongus 1993)
Sheet 189 68 S.
Tegernsee
(H. Dongus 1994)
Sheet 190 69 S.
Salzburg
(K. Hormann 1978)
47 ° 30'-
-47 ° 15 '








Sheet 193
Oberstdorf
Sheet 194
Mittenwald
Sheet 195
Tegernsee-S (up to 47 ° 24 ')
Sheet 196
Salzburg-S (up to 47 ° 24 ')
NB / OIL 5 ° 40'-6 ° 20 ' 6 ° 20 '- 7 ° 20' 7 ° 20 '- 8 ° 20' 8 ° 20 '- 9 ° 20' 9 ° 20 '- 10 ° 20' ! 10 ° 20 '- 11 ° 20' 11 ° 20 '- 12 ° 20' 12 ° 20 '- 13 ° 20' 13 ° 20 '- 14 ° 20' 14 ° 20 '- 15 ° 20'

West Germany

If one disregards the southeast in Bavaria and the extreme north ( Schleswig-Holstein and Hamburg ), the old federal states were largely covered in full, for the most part by 1974.

GDR

The only sheet lying almost exclusively in the area of ​​the former GDR is sheet 75 Stendal (see table above). When the idea of ​​completely mapping the area of ​​the GDR was given up, the extreme southwest, located in Lower Saxony, moved from the unpublished sheet 59 Ludwigslust in the form of a cut-out map to sheet 58 Lüneburg to the west . Otherwise only sheet 100 Halberstadt (see table), which contains (almost) the entire resin , is predominantly East German .

A sheet of Berlin planned from the mid-1960s should then have a regular format, but not a regular location, the section of which should be based on the city limits. But even this never appeared.

Bavaria

Besides the three northernmost states, Bavaria is the only incompletely mapped west German state, with the gap in the east of Franconia . Some of the Bavarian map sheets were only finished after reunification. Since East Bavaria in particular can only be viewed in the overall table by scrolling, here is a partial overview:

NB \ OIL 9 ° 20'-10 ° 20 ' 10 ° 20'-11 ° 20 ' 11 ° 20'-12 ° 20 ' 12 ° 20'-13 ° 20 ' 13 ° 20'-14 ° 20 '
50 ° 30 '
-
50 ° 00'
Sheet 140 43 S.
Schweinfurt
(B. Schwenzer 1968)
Sheet 141 42 S.
Coburg
(H. Späth 1987)
Sheet 142/143
Plauen (south)
(ne)
50 ° 00 '
-
49 ° 30'
Sheet 152 45 S.
Würzburg
(div. 1963)
Sheet 153 48 S.
Bamberg
(K.-A. Habbe 2004)
Sheet 154/155
Bayreuth
(ne)
49 ° 30 '
-
49 ° 00'
Sheet 162 58 S.
Rothenburg od Tauber
(W.-D. Sick 1962)
Sheet 163 33 p.
Nürnberg
(F. Tichy 1973)
Sheet 164 64 p.
Regensburg
(DJ Manske 1981)
Sheet 165/166 86 S.
Cham
(K. Müller-Hohenstein 1973)
Sheet
165/166
up to 13 ° 25 '
49 ° 00 '
-
48 ° 30'
Sheet 171 54 S.
Göppingen
(H. Dongus 1961)
Sheet 172 39 S.
Nördlingen
(R. Jätzold 1962)
Sheet 173 30 S.
Ingolstadt
(div 1990)
Sheet 174 88 S.
Straubing
(W. Czajka, H.-J. Klink 1967)
Sheet 175 50 S.
Passau
(U. Bodemüller 1971)
48 ° 30 '
-
48 ° 00'
Sheet 179 39 S.
Ulm
(H. Graul 1952)
Sheet 180 24 p.
Augsburg
(H. Graul 1962)
Sheet 181 128 S.
Munich
(G. Michler 1994)
Sheet 182/183 47 S.
Burghausen
(P. Weichhart 1979)
Sheet
182/183
to 13 ° 30 '
48 ° 00 '
-
47 ° 30'
Sheet 187/193 94 S.
Lindau / Oberstdorf
(H. Dongus 1991)
Sheet 188/194 87 p.
Kaufbeuren / Mittenwald
(H. Dongus 1993)
Sheet 189/195 68 S.
Tegernsee
(H. Dongus 1994)
190/196 69 p.
Salzburg
(K. Hormann 1978)
47 ° 30'-
-47 ° 15 '
Sheet 187/193 Sheet 188/194 Sheet 189/195 Sheet 190/196

The above table does not cover small parts of Lower Franconia (sheets 139 Frankfurt and 151 Darmstadt, see table above).

List with complete information

In the following list all author names are given in full. ISBN was not issued until 1973, but not all copies with ISBN can be found in the German National Library, while many older volumes without ISBN can be found there.

(54 ° 35 '- 54 ° 00')

  • Sheet 22: Husum (Gerold Richter 1962; 46 p.) → Lage
  • Journal 11/ 24: Eutin / Westermarkelsdorf (Brigitte Schwenzer 1974 26 p) - ISBN 3-87994-305-2Location

(54 ° 00 '- 53 ° 30')

  • Sheet 37/38 : Wilhelmshaven / Norden (Sofie Meisel 1961; 21 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 39: Bremerhaven (Sofie Meisel 1962; 18 pages) → Lage

(53 ° 30 '- 53 ° 00')

  • Sheet 54/55 : Oldenburg / Emden (Herbert Lehmann [preliminary work], Sofie Meisel 1962; 40 pages) → location
  • Sheet 56: Bremen (Sofie Meisel 1961; 28 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 57: Hamburg (Süd) (Sofie Meisel 1964: 44 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 58: Lüneburg ( Wolfgang Meibeyer 1980; 43 pages) - ISBN 3-87994-369-9location

(53 ° 00 '- 52 ° 30')

  • Journal 70/ 71: Cloppenburg / Lingen (Sophie Meisel, 1959; 36 pp) → Location
  • Sheet 72: Nienburg (Weser) (Sofie Meisel 1959; 29 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 73: Celle (Sofie Meisel 1960; 37 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 74: Salzwedel ( Wolfgang Meibeyer 1970; 46 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 75: Stendal (H. Claus 1964; 31 p.) → Lage

(52 ° 30 '- 52 ° 00')

  • Sheet 83/84 : Osnabrück / Bentheim (Sofie Meisel 1961; 66 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 85: Minden (Sofie Meisel 1959; 50 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 86: Hanover (Sofie Meisel 1960; 60 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 87: Braunschweig ( Theodor Müller 1962; 38 pages) → Lage

(52 ° 00 '- 51 ° 30')

  • Journal 95/ 96: Kleve / Wesel (Wilhelm of Kurten 1977, 75 p) - ISBN 3-87994-323-0Location
  • Sheet 97: Münster (Sofie Meisel 1960; 47 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 98: Detmold (Sofie Meisel 1959; 40 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 99: Göttingen ( Jürgen Hövermann 1963; 36 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 100: Halberstadt (Jürgen Spönemann 1970; 37 pages) → Lage

(51 ° 30 '- 51 ° 00')

  • Leaf 108/ 109: Dusseldorf / Erkelenz ( Karl Heinz puffing , Adolf shaker, Heinrich Müller-Miny 1963; 55 p) → Location
  • Sheet 110: Arnsberg (Martin Bürgener 1969; 80 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 111: Arolsen (Martin Bürgener 1963; 94 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 112: Kassel (Hans-Jürgen Klink 1969; 108 pages) → Lage

(51 ° 00 '- 50 ° 30')

  • Sheet 122/ 123: Cologne / Aachen (Ewald Glässer 1978; 52 pages) - ISBN 3-87994-328-1Location
  • Sheet 124: Siegen (Heinz Fischer 1972; 36 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 125: Marburg ( Gerhard Sandner 1960; 32 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 126: Fulda (Werner Röll 1969; 38 pages) → Lage

(50 ° 30 '- 50 ° 00')

  • Sheet 136/ 137: Cochem (Heinz Fischer, Richard Graafen 1974; 39 pages) - ISBN 3-87994-338-9Location
  • Sheet 138: Koblenz (Heinrich Müller-Miny, Martin Bürgener 1971; 82 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 139: Frankfurt a. M. (Brigitte Schwenzer 1967; 35 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 140: Schweinfurt (Brigitte Schwenzer 1968; 43 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 141: Coburg (Heinz Späth 1987; 42 pages) - ISBN 3-87994-342-7location

(50 ° 00 '- 49 ° 30')

  • Leaf 148/ 149: register / Mettendorf (Otmar Werle, 1974; 68 pp) - ISBN 3-87994-344-3Location
  • Sheet 150: Mainz ( Harald Uhlig 1964; 39 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 151: Darmstadt (Otto Klausing 1967; 61 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 152: Würzburg ( Horst Mensching , Günter Wagner 1963; 45 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 153: Bamberg (Karl Albert Habbe 2004, appeared as an essay “ The natural space units on sheet 153 Bamberg 1: 200000 - A bundle of problems and a proposed structure ” in communications from the Franconian Geographical Society 2003/2004 , pp. 55-102; 48 pp. ) → location

(49 ° 30 '- 49 ° 00')

(49 ° 00 '- 48 ° 30')

  • Sheet 169: Rastatt (Heinz Fischer 1967; 31 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 170: Stuttgart ( Friedrich Huttenlocher 1949, Hansjörg Dongus 1967; 76 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 171: Göppingen (Hansjörg Dongus 1961; 54 p.) → Lage
  • Sheet 172: Nördlingen (Ralph Jätzold 1962; 39 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 173: Ingolstadt (Otto Sporbeck, Hansgeorg Schlichtmann 1990; 30 pages) - ISBN 3-87994-361-3location
  • Sheet 174: Straubing ( Willi Czajka , Hans-Jürgen Klink 1967; 88 pages) → Lage
  • Sheet 175: Passau (Udo Bodemüller 1971; 50 pages) → Lage

(48 ° 30 '- 48 ° 00')

(48 ° 00 '- 47 ° 15')

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. In individual cases, the number of main units was subsequently increased to over 10. In these cases, at least one of the three-digit numbers was split up by a subsequent and a subscript sub-number.
  2. The small southwest part of the excerpt from the unpublished sheet 59, located in West Germany, can be found on sheet 58.
  3. The map sheets from 1963 did not yet include a sheet of Berlin in the overview of all planned and available map sheets, while the sheet Schweinfurt from 1968 already included one.
  4. Not published in the original book series - appeared as an essay “ The natural space units on sheet 153 Bamberg 1: 200000 - A bundle of problems and an outline proposal ” in communications from the Franconian Geographical Society 2003/2004, pages 55-102.
  5. On the map sheet 54/55 only Sofie Meisel is mentioned as the author; On the other hand, the title page of the book reads »Using a preliminary work by Herbert Lehmann, edited by Sofie Meisel«
  6. a b In the web search in the search results (e.g. in the Karlsruhe Virtual Catalog ) the ISBN is found on -369-9 under sheet Lüneburg, the ISBN on -313-3 under Burghausen; for the sake of the system, however, the exact opposite case would be logical! Since both books appeared at about the same time, it is probably an application error by the Federal Agency.
  7. Sheet Cologne Aachen is found under the ISBN with the final digits 328-1 (among other things in the National Library), but should actually have the volume number 333 instead of 328 due to the system .
  8. There is a 1996 edition of the map on sheet 181 Munich , processing completed in July 1996 .