Hanau-Seligenstadt Valley

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The Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke ( natural area 232.2) is a marginal basin of the Upper Rhine Rift in the area of ​​the eastern Lower Main Plain (main unit 232), which is also known synonymously as the Eastern Lower Main Plane .

location

Panorama of the Lower Main Plain from the last foothills of the Odenwald on Klein-Umstädter district with a view over Kleestadt into the Dieburger Bucht to Frankfurt and Hanau , limited on the horizon by the Taunus

The Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke lies in the area of ​​the eastern Lower Main Plain. The river Main flows through it between Aschaffenburg and Offenbach am Main . Due to its location in the eastern Rhine-Main area , the Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke is densely populated. The largest cities include Hanau , Seligenstadt and Dieburg .

Geological structure

The Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke is a Cenozoic , trench-like basin. As the edge basin of the Upper Rhine Rift , it belongs to the European Cenozoic Rift System , a fracture zone that runs through Europe from the North Sea to the Mediterranean.

In the west a horst ( Sprendlinger Horst , in the northern extension Frankfurter Horst ) separates the Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke from the Upper Rhine Graben. The eastern shoulder of the trench is formed by the Spessart . In the south, the valley is bounded by the Odenwald . In the north the shoulders of the trench converge like a wedge. The subsoil under the basin deposits is built up by the Variscan basement of the Central German Crystalline Zone and the discordant layer sequence from the Permian (Upper Rotliegend ) to the Lower Triassic ( Buntsandstein ). The layers deposited in the basin are more than 280 m thick and range from the Oligocene to the Quaternary . In the Oligocene and Miocene, marine, brackish and limnic , most recently continental clays , marls , limestone banks and sands with embedded basalt lavas predominate. The river deposits of the Pliocene and Quaternary consist of sand, gravel , silt and clay , in the Pliocene also lignite . The surface is shaped by a river terrace landscape.

History of origin

From the Triassic to the early Paleogene , the area of ​​today's Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke was not a deposit area, but an area of ​​erosion. The subsidence began at the latest in the Oligocene ( Rupelian ) around 30 million years ago during the formation of the Upper Rhine Rift. The Oberrheingrabenmeer or the Oberrheingrabenensee also extended over the area of ​​the Hanau-Seligenstädter Depression. Debris carried in from the basin edges increasingly led to silting up of the lake in the course of the Miocene . The Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke became a river plain. Around 15 million years ago during the Langhium, volcanoes poured lava flows over parts of the area that have been preserved as solidified basalt rock . Even during the Langhian, the rivers began to remove their own deposits. It was not until the Pliocene (around 5 million years ago) that the Lower Main and its tributaries began to deposit sand , gravel and clay in their valleys . Layers of clay and peat (now brown coal ) formed in lakes and bogs . The then still relatively short Main tapped the Obermain in the early Quaternary . The resulting strongly increased river transported large quantities of sand and gravel into the Hanau-Seligenstädter valley. In the mid- Pleistocene , the rivers eventually began to dig into their older deposits again. The various stages of this burial history are preserved today in the form of river terraces .

Raw materials and groundwater

In the Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke sand, gravel and clay are extracted from numerous pits and quarry ponds. Pliocene lignite was mined in the region around Großkrotzenburg , Kahl am Main and Seligenstadt until the 1930s . Today the opencast mines form the Kahler Seenplatte . In the vicinity of Hanau, some disused quarries (e.g. the Dietesheim quarries ) testify to the extraction of Miocene basalts up to the 1980s. The sands and gravels are abundant aquifers that are used for the water supply.

Individual evidence

  1. Environmental Atlas Hesse: Map and Description

See also

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  • Peter Prinz-Grimm and Ingeborg Grimm: Wetterau and Mainebene. Borntraeger, Berlin / Stuttgart 2002, ISBN 3-443-15076-4 ( collection of geological guides 93 ), esp.p. 8f.
  • Stefan Lang: The geological development of the Hanau-Seligenstädter Senke (Hessen, Bavaria). Electronic publications Darmstadt (EPDA), 782, 97 pp., 51 fig., 5 tab., Appendix, 2007. [1]