Leinegraben
The Leinegraben is a lowland in southern Lower Saxony and , to a lesser extent, in northeast Hesse . It extends about 48 km in an approximately south-north direction along the eponymous Leine from Arenshausen via Friedland , Göttingen and Northeim to Einbeck .
The core ditch between Friedland and Northeim, which is up to 8 km wide and where a fault is crossed, is characterized by particularly distinctive fault edges and is 34 km long. A narrowing to two kilometers at Nörten-Hardenberg divides it into the Göttinger Leinegraben in the south and the Northeimer Leinegraben in the north.
In Einbeck leash digging goes to the northeast flowing into the Ilme Valley of Ilme and its tributaries over, with whom he the natural spatial main unit Leash Ilme sink forms. Immediately to the east of Einbeck, the Leine leaves the valley via a breakthrough valley between Salzderhelden and Kreiensen .
The Leinegraben also forms a geological structural space, delimited somewhat differently , which leaves the Leine catchment area to the south and reaches the Werra to the southeast of Witzenhausen .
geology
Keuper can be found in the subsoil of the Leinegraben , while to the east and west a layered landscape of red sandstone ( Hardenberg Castle ) and shell limestone ( Plesse Castle ) rises up, assigned to the Leinebergland . In the normal sequence of layers one would expect the younger Keuper to be above the other two layers ( Germanic Triassic ).
The Leinegraben is now mostly interpreted as a rift valley in the Mediterranean-Mjosen zone with " Rhenish strike ". Similar to the Upper Rhine Graben , the Leinegraben is accompanied in the west by basalt deposits ( Hoher Hagen , quarries near Adelebsen ). While the difference in height can usually be seen very clearly at the fault on the east side ( Wieter near Northeim, Göttinger Wald ), the increase in the west is less pronounced.
Some Rhaetian ridges have remained within the trench .
Natural structure
The Leine-Ilme-Senke as part of the Lower Saxon mountainous region is structured as follows:
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(to 37 Weser-Leine-Bergland)
- 372 Leine-Ilme-Senke
- 372.0 Einbeck - Markoldendorfer Basin ( Ilme Valley )
- 372.1 Northeimer Keuperhügelland (threshold between Leinegraben, Moringer basin and Ilme valley)
- 372.2 Northeimer Leinegraben (east wing)
- 372.3 leash aue
- 372.4 Moringer basin landscape (western side basin near Moringen )
- 372.5 Göttinger Leinegraben (east wing)
- 372.6 Göttinger Leinegraben (west wing)
- 372.7 Oberer Leinegraben
- 372 Leine-Ilme-Senke
Importance to humans
The Leinegraben is covered with loess soil and enables good agriculture.
As a trade route, the Leinegraben was of secondary importance in the 10th century at the latest with the flourishing of shipping on the parallel Weser . Where it was crossed by east-west roads, trading and Hanseatic cities such as Einbeck, Northeim and Göttingen developed. The royal palace of Grona in Göttingen-Grone was also located above an entrance to the Leinegraben.
Today the old north-south route and the high-speed route Hanover – Würzburg run in sections through the Leinegraben, the federal highway 7 runs from Northeim to Göttingen-Weende above its western edge.
Coordinates: 51 ° 38 ' N , 9 ° 55' E
literature
- Fritsche / Hemfler / Kämmerer / Leßmann / Mittelbach / Peters / Pöschl / Rumohr / Schlösser-Kluger: Description of the hydrogeological sub-areas of Hesse in accordance with the EU Water Framework Directive (EU WFD) . Geol Jb Hessen 130, 2003, p. 7: Chap. 3.2.1.1 (PDF; 246 kB) .
- Hans Georg Wunderlich: Tectogenesis of the Leinetalgraben and its edge clods. Geologische Rundschau 1959, pages 372-413
- Oskar Gruppe: The creation of the Göttingen Leinetalgraben: a contribution to the tectonics of our central German rifts. Yearbook of the Prussian Geological Institute 1921, special edition Berlin digitized
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ E. Meynen and J. Schmithüsen : Handbook of the natural spatial structure of Germany - Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Remagen / Bad Godesberg 1953–1962 (9 deliveries in 8 books, updated map 1: 1,000,000 with main units 1960)
- ↑ Interactive map and legend on the geological structure of Hesse in the Hesse Environmental Atlas of the Hessian State Office for Environment and Geology
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↑ Various authors: Geographical Land Survey: The natural space units in individual sheets 1: 200,000 - Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1952–1991 → online maps .
- Sheet 99: Göttingen (Jürgen Hövermann 1963)
- Sheet 112: Kassel (H.-J. Klink 1969)