Lassnitzbach (Mur)

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Lassnitzbach
Laßnitz
Data
location In Upper Styria , Austria , near Murau
River system Danube
Drain over Mur  → Drava  → Danube  → Black Sea
origin Confluence of the right Priewaldbach and the left Auenbach
47 ° 4 ′ 36 ″  N , 14 ° 12 ′ 12 ″  E
Source height 950  m above sea level A.
muzzle In the village of Laßnitzbach approx. 2 km east of Murau in the Mur coordinates: 47 ° 6 ′ 20 ″  N , 14 ° 12 ′ 3 ″  E 47 ° 6 ′ 20 ″  N , 14 ° 12 ′ 3 ″  E
Mouth height 780  m above sea level A.
Height difference 170 m from the source of the Priewaldbach 520 m
Bottom slope 45 ‰
length 3.8 km to the confluence of the source rivers, then Priewaldbach 7 km, Auenbach 6 km
Catchment area 53.73 km²
Drain MQ
200 l / s
Left tributaries Left source river (Auenbach): Grattingerbach, Grenzbach, Draxlbach
Right tributaries Right source river (Priewaldbach): Roßbach, Talbach, Zanitzbergbach, Grabenbergbach
Communities Metnitz , Laßnitz near Murau
Residents in the catchment area 1000

The Lassnitzbach , also Laßnitz , is a right tributary of the Mur in Upper Styria in Austria .

Name customer

The name Lassnitz is spelled differently. The official Austrian map 2007 uses the variant Lassnitz- for the stream, while the localities are written as Laßnitz- . Older maps use Lasnitz .

Lassnitz is used not only as a name for the river, but also for its entire valley landscape and the municipality of Laßnitz near Murau. The word is pronounced in everyday life with a stressed, long “a”, the double “ss” in some spellings is no indication of a short pronounced vowel.

The name comes from Slavic , originally z. B. Lieznica , Luosniza , and is translated as 'Waldbach'. In linguistics, Laßnitz (from the year 890:  Luonzniza ) also (reconstructed) * loNč'nica 'Wiesenbach' is discussed, as a further possibility (from the year 1345: Lesniz for the place or in 1080 in the Paltental Laznich ) * laz 'nica to a clearing name (i.e.' Gereutbach 'or' Rodebach '). The derivation from * laz / 6nica , to lazъ , 'clearing, receding, clear spot in the forest' contains a reference to the course of the brook in a cleared area.

geography

Run and landscape

The area of ​​the Lasnitz with the border triangle formed by the source rivers in the map by Georg Matthäus Vischer 1678.
The Lasnitz bei Murau and its surroundings in the Schwarzenbergische Murau district court, street and path folder 1769/1772.
Murauer Lassnitz based on the general map of Central Europe 1: 200,000 at the end of the 19th century.

The Lassnitzbach flows in the Gurktal Alps from the Metnitz Mountains north to the Mur . Its course lies in the municipalities of Metnitz in Carinthia and Laßnitz near Murau in Styria .

It arises from two source rivers: the Priewaldbach from the southeast and the Auenbach (also called Grattingerbach) from the southwest. The Priewaldbach rises in the Metnitz Mountains at the Priewaldkreuz between Kuhalm and Mittagskogel at 1300  m above sea level. A. , the Auenbach at the foot of the Ackerlhöhe south of Murau at 1175  m above sea level. A.

These source rivers form the border between the Austrian federal states of Styria and Carinthia . The Priewaldbach is Grenzbach in its entire course, the Auenbach from the confluence of the Grenzbach. The brooks form a triangle with which the area of ​​the province of Carinthia (municipality Metnitz ) extends from the south over the ridge of the Gurktal Alps into the Murtal.

The villages of Kärntnerisch Laßnitz and Steirisch Laßnitz are located on the Lassnitzbach and its source rivers . The settlement areas ( cadastral communities ) along the stream are called Laßnitz-Lambrecht (east) and Laßnitz-Murau (west). The village of St. Egidi north of the confluence of the Lassnitzbach and the Mur was formerly known as “St. Egidi-Laßnitz "called.

The name "Laßnitzdorf" (like "Laßnitz") is used jointly for the villages of Steirisch Laßnitz and Carinthian Laßnitz, which are separated by the state border.

As village "Laßnitzbach" the houses are referred to in the Mur valley at the junction of Lassnitzbach Valley.

To the west of the Lassnitzbach is the Murauer Frauenalm ( 1583  m above sea level ), on which there is a recreational and winter sports area.

The road connection from Murau via St. Lambrecht to the Neumarkter and Perchauer Sattel leads via Laßnitz-Lambrecht along the Talbach to the east and past the Weyrerteich .

A road leads through the valley of the Auenbach to Metnitz .

geology

The Lassnitzbach flows in a zone of very old rocks in the Alps :

Its course lies in the north of the “Murau and Gurktal Paleozoic ”, which was formed from approx. 540 to 300 million years old, partly volcanic rocks. It is a mountain zone that has not been strongly reshaped during the mountain formation (only weakly metamorphically overprinted), so that a largely complete sequence of layers from the Ordovician to the Upper Carboniferous can be reconstructed. The "layers of Kher", Metadiabase , Eisenhutschiefer , these rocks are assigned to the Ordovician to Silurian are characteristic of these rock sequences . The area is part of the Upper Eastern Alpine ceiling floor of the Alps.

The middle reaches of the Lassnitzbach cut into gravel deposits of the Mur glacier ( moraines ) from the Ice Age ( Pleistocene ).

Shortly before the confluence with the Mur, there is a narrow strip of Murau limestone (old Paleozoic ligament limestone), which is assigned to the Devonian and another strip of quartzite (Semmering quartzite ) from the Permian to Scyth .

Environment and soil

The Lassnitzbach flows through forests and agricultural areas. The settlements in its catchment area are partly located directly on the water.

The agriculturally usable (or previously used as such) soils on the Lassnitzbach are largely lime-free loose sediment brown soils , on the slopes of Ranker and Hanggleye .

Water quality

The water quality is quality class I-II (almost unpolluted, in practice almost drinking water quality). Less pollution can arise from the neighboring farms and settlement.

The water hardness is low (range 1–2 - soft water).

history

Part of the catchment area of ​​the Lassnitzbach belonged to the holdings of the Schwarzenberg family in the Murau district until the 19th century , another part to the Benedictine monastery of St. Lambrecht and the Carinthian part was mainly subject to the Gurk diocese .

literature

Christian inventory man: Carinthian Laßnitz. History of a village and its surroundings. Metnitz 2007.

credentials

  1. BMLFUW (ed.) : List of areas of the Austrian river basins: Mur area. In: Contributions to Austria's Hydrography Issue No. 60, Vienna 2011, p. 17. PDF download , accessed on July 6, 2018.
  2. ^ Austrian map 1: 50,000. Sheet 159 Murau. Published by the Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying (Land Survey) in Vienna. Edition of the Austrian Map on the Internet of the Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying. Query 10 January 2007.
  3. a b Notes on the map: Mappa Dynastiarum Schwarzenbergicarum in Styria superiore sitarum Murau, Frauenburg et Reiffenstein bonorumque his incorporatorum (Murauer regional court, street and path map, 1769/1772). Original in the Schwarzenberg Archives Murau Plan No. 82a. In: Archiv Verlag, Steiermark Edition Blatt STE 01010.
  4. ^ Georg Matthäus Vischer : Styriae Ducatus Fertilissimi Nova Geographica Descriptio. 1678. Original (“Fertilissima”, first edition of this map series) in the Graz regional archive. Printed with explanations in: Archiv Verlag. Styria Edition Sheet STE 01004.
  5. Werner Tscherne : From Lonsperch to Deutschlandsberg. Editor and publisher: Stadtgemeinde Deutschlandsberg 1990. No ISBN. Page 40.
  6. Manfred Trummer: Slawische Steiermark = Slightly extended version of the lecture of the same name at the symposium “To be foreign - stay together. The Slovene Ethnic Group in Austria ”as part of the“ Slovene Days ”at the Karl-Franzens University in Graz, 25. – 28. March 1996. From: Christian Stenner (ed.): Slovenian Styria. Displaced minority in Austria's southeast. Series of publications on the customer of Southeast Europe II / 23. Published by the Institute for History of the University of Graz, Department of Southeast European History, Univ.-Prof. Dr. Karl Kaser. Böhlau Verlag, Vienna-Cologne-Weimar 1997, pages 15-34 (examples: pages 21, 22 and 24). ISBN 3-205-98690-3 .
  7. ^ Eberhard Kranzmayer: Place name book of Carinthia. Part I: The settlement history of Carinthia from prehistoric times to the present in the mirror of the names. Klagenfurt 1956. Published by the History Association for Carinthia in the series Archive for patriotic history and topography , Volume 50. Derived from Old Slovene * lo (n) č (i) níca . Pages 113, 158. Quoted from: Monika Voggenberger. The Slavic place names in East Tyrol. Keyword "Lasnitzen".
  8. Monika Voggenberger. The Slavic place names in East Tyrol. Salzburg 1983. Dissertation to obtain a doctorate at the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Salzburg. No publisher, no ISBN. Keyword "Lasnitzen".
  9. a b General map of Central Europe 1: 200,000. Pages 32–47 Klagenfurt.
  10. ^ Austrian map 1: 50,000. Sheet 159 Murau. Published by the Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying (Land Survey) in Vienna. Recorded in 1969, individual supplements in 1971.
  11. a b c Helmut W. Flügel, F. Neubauer: Geology of the Austrian federal states in brief individual representations. Styria. Geological map of Styria 1: 200,000 with explanations. Federal Geological Institute, "Federal State Series". Vienna 1984. ISBN 3-900312-12-5 . Pages 49, 55-58.
  12. ^ Hans Georg Krenmayr, Albert Daurer (editor): Rocky Austria. A colorful geological history of Austria. Federal Geological Institute, Vienna 1999. ISBN 3-85316-006-9 . Page 23.
  13. named after a former community near Rein Abbey near Graz (2007: Eisbach community , west of Gratwein ). See H. Flügel: The tectonic structure of Kher near Rein. Contributions to the knowledge of the Graz Paleozoic I. Communications of the Geological Society in Vienna, Volume 45, 1952. Pages 147–163. Vienna 1954, to the scan (PDF; 586 kB).
  14. Agricultural Research Center of the State of Styria, Graz: Soil Protection Report 1998 (queried January 18, 2008) (PDF; 4 MB) of the 1998 soil status inventory. No ISBN. Pages 15-16.
  15. Federal Research and Training Center for Forests, Natural Hazards and Landscape (BFW), Vienna: Digital Soil Map ( Memento of the original from December 27, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / bfw.ac.at archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. from Austria (queried January 18, 2008).