Klausgraben (Bisamberg)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Klausgraben
Klausgraben Langenzersdorfer Strasse.jpg
Data
Water code AT : GGN: 905660, 312569
location Bisamberg near Vienna
River basin district Danube below Jochenstein (DUJ)
origin at Lahnerberg
48 ° 18 '34.52 "  N , 16 ° 22' 46.85"  O
Source height 257  m above sea level A.
Infiltration Drains and ground water Donau / beginning of March channel field coordinates: 48 ° 17 '45.71 "  N , 16 ° 22' 32.38"  O 48 ° 17 '45.71 "  N , 16 ° 22' 32.38"  O
Mouth height 164  m above sea level A.
Height difference 93 m

Catchment area 3.8 km²
Lower course border Lower Austria – Vienna;

The Klausgraben is a small channel on the city limits of Vienna near Langenzersdorf .

Run and landscape

The Klausgraben rises on the Lahnerberg  ( 304  m above sea level ), the summit of the Bisamberg range close to the city , at about 260  m above sea level. A. It runs southwards, at first about a kilometer in a deep ditch of the Bisamberg. Then he reaches the Donaufeld at Kellergasse (wayside cross with Fillenbaumgasse). After a further 800 meters, in which it is fully canalized and forms the border between Lower Austria and Vienna, the brook disappears shortly after Donau Straße (Prager Straße, B3) in the drainage of the city of Vienna.

Hydrography

Originally the brook flowed directly into the Danube , which after the Wiener Pforte formed an intertwined river landscape . After the Danube regulation in the 1870s a remained at the mouth at Strebersdorf Altwasser that the train of the current recreation area naval and black paints in Jedlesee belonged. The Strebersdorfer Altwasser no longer exists, it can still be seen in the arc Weidengasse - Dirndlwiese - Stowassergasse (also Vienna border) as well as the Danube-facing parallel streets. The Strebersdorfer Haufen also refers to the meadow landscape ( Haufen 'Schwemminsel', cf. Gänsehäufl ).

With the construction of the Marchfeld Canal in 1984–1992, which crosses the old tributary a little south of here, the brook indirectly belongs to its catchment area.

literature

  • Raimund Hinkel, Kurt Landsmann, Robert Vrtala: Floridsdorf from AZ: the 21st district in 1,000 key words. Verlag Christian Brandstätter, 1997, p. 107

Individual evidence

  1. BMLFUW (Hrsg.): Area directory of the river areas: Danube area from the Enns to the Leitha. In: Contributions to Austria's Hydrography Issue 62, Vienna 2014, p. 123. PDF download , accessed on July 8, 2018.