Hainbach (Schwemmbach)

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Hainbach
Data
Water code AT : HZB: 2-008-281-038-014; DWK: 30572-0018, -0041, -0009, -0033
location Salzburg / Upper Austria , Austria
River system Danube
Drain over Schwemmbach  → Mattig  → Inn  → Danube  → Black Sea
source in Anbarten
47 ° 59 ′ 2 ″  N , 13 ° 19 ′ 12 ″  E
Source height 595  m above sea level A.
muzzle at Teichstätt (flood retention basin) coordinates: 48 ° 1 '50.39 "  N , 13 ° 12' 30.13"  O 48 ° 1 '50.39 "  N , 13 ° 12' 30.13"  O
Mouth height 418  m above sea level A.
Height difference 177 m
Bottom slope 12 ‰
length 14.6 km
Catchment area 62.4 km²
Discharge at the Lengau
A Eo gauge : 48.1 km².
Location: 3.27 km above the mouth
NNQ (04.06.2003)
MNQ 1987–2011
MQ 1987–2011
Mq 1987–2011
MHQ 1987–2011
HHQ (12.08.2002)
0 l / s
16 l / s
460 l / s
9.6 l / (s km²)
12.1 m³ / s
22 m³ / s
Left tributaries Irrsdorfer Bach , Pfongauer Bach
Communities Straßwalchen , Lengau

The Hainbach is a small stream near Straßwalchen , Land Salzburg and neighboring Upper Austria .

Run and landscape

The Hainbach rises in the village of Einstarten east of Straßwalchen, about one kilometer west of the state border, at the saddle to the Vöcklatal . At Thalham he takes the Irrsdorfer Bach (Mühlbach) from the left and turns northwest at the foot of the Irrsberg . As a result, it is the Dorfbach of Straßwalchen, where it also includes the Pfongauer Bach . At Haidach it crosses the state border and enters the upper Mattig valley . It passes Lengau in a straight line, and between Teichstätt and Oberhaft it flows below Teichstätt from the left into the flood retention basin of the Schwemmbach , a tributary of the Mattig (to the Inn near Braunau). Its run is 15.5 kilometers long.

Hydrography

The Hainbach was formerly a small trickle without an estuary , which so far seeped away at the latest in the Lengau village of Bach a little south of the current estuary in the damp area of ​​the Mattig Valley . Due to strong regulation and drainage of its upper course, it led increasingly more water and in 1964 it penetrated for the first time via Valentinhaft to Munderfing . In 1968 it was therefore relocated to a new creek bed, known as the Mittelwasserüberführung . At the end of the 1970s, this brook increasingly threatened the areas south of Munderfing with floods. Therefore it was fed into the newly built retention basin (mouth of the river - km 16.4 of the Schwemmbach). Due to the increase in sealed ground areas, especially in the industrial areas around Straßwalchen, the stream is still very susceptible to flooding in heavy rain.

literature

  • Office of the Upper Austrian Provincial Government: Mattig and Schwemmbach, investigations into water quality. Status 1992–1994, series subdivision water protection (ed.): Water protection report 10/1995, Linz 1995.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e SAGIS, layer water → waters, groundwater bodies ; DORIS, Layer Water & Geology
  2. Federal Ministry for Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water Management (Ed.): Hydrographisches Jahrbuch von Österreich 2011. 119th Volume. Vienna 2013, p. OG 145, PDF (12.9 MB) on bmlrt.gv.at (Yearbook 2011)
  3. The Franzisco-Josephinische (3.) Landesaufnahme around 1877 gives the name Hummel Bach here ; Layer online at DORIS , map theme First state recordings .