Lindenbach (Glems)

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Lindenbach
upper course name: Talgraben
lower course name: Lachengraben
The Lindenbach (Lachengraben) just before it flows into the Glems

The Lindenbach (Lachengraben) just before it flows into the Glems

Data
Water code DE : 238466
location Schönbuch and Glemswald

Neckar basin


Baden-Württemberg

Drain over Glems  → Enz  → Neckar  → Rhine
source a little southeast of the altitude clearing around Solitude Castle in the Grundsteinwald
48 ° 47 ′ 0 ″  N , 9 ° 5 ′ 28 ″  E
Source height approx.  476  m above sea level NHN
muzzle in Ditzingen after the last westerly run from the right to the middle Glems coordinates: 48 ° 49 '46 "  N , 9 ° 4' 0"  E 48 ° 49 '46 "  N , 9 ° 4' 0"  E
Mouth height approx.  295  m above sea level NHN
Height difference approx. 181 m
Bottom slope approx. 17 ‰
length 10.6 km 
on the river valley Talgraben → Lindenbach → Lachengraben
Catchment area 28.586 km²

The Lindenbach , on the upper reaches of the forest Talgraben , called Lachengraben on the lower reaches to the west , is an almost 11 kilometer long right tributary of the Glems in Ditzingen in the Ludwigsburg district in central Baden-Württemberg .

geography

course

The source of the Lindenbach is around 476  m above sea level. NHN near Schloss Solitude in the area of ​​the state capital Stuttgart . It initially flows through the forest for a long time as a valley ditch in a north-easterly direction through the Lindental to the eastern outskirts of the Weilimdorf district . There, in front of the western part of the Lemberg ridge, it turns in a long twisted course to the west and then to the northwest to the substation south of the Grüner Heiner .

At a little under 300  m above sea level. NHN now flows at the end of the village into the again open course of the rather short Lachengraben from the east, in the direction of which the Lindenbach now continues under its name. It changes over to the city limits of Ditzingen , crosses under the A 81 in front of its settlement area and is reinforced in the city by its most important tributary, the Beutenbach , whose sources are also located a little further northwest on the Solitude.

A little afterwards it flows to around 295  m above sea level. NHN not far from Ditzingen Castle from the right into the middle Glems. After its 10.6 km long run with an average bottom gradient of about 16 ‰, it flows about 181 meters below its origin.

Catchment area

The Lindenbach drains an area of ​​26.6 km². The source and the first part of the upper reaches to the northeast are, from a natural point of view, in the lower area of ​​the Glemswald border heights of Schönbuch and Glemswald . Then it runs through to the bend near Weilimdorf, the sub-area of ​​the southern Strohgäurand of the Neckar basin , the brook borders partly hard to the east on the sub-area of Feuerbach Bay of the Stuttgart Bay . After changing to a western to northwestern course, it crosses into the sub-area Langes Feld of the Neckar basin before Ditzingen .

Tributaries and lakes

The first two tributaries to the valley ditch in the area of ​​the forest stretch are two short Klingenbach streams, the first and shorter outflow is a small pond between Solitude and the Sandkopf , the second from the Sperberklinge a little before Weilimdorf . After this inflow, the stream is then called Lindenbach . On the northeastern edge of Weilimdorf, it is dammed up at the foot of the Lemberg to Lindenbachsee , a flood retention basin with an area of ​​around 0.5 hectares in permanent storage. Another natural lake in the catchment area, the 0.6 hectare Tachensee , is located between Weilimdorf and Korntal on the western edge of the Greutterwald . The Lachengraben flowing towards the second major change of direction from Korntal is quite short and only carries inconsistent water. The only major tributary, the Beutenbach, already in Ditzingen, on the other hand, even surpasses the Lindenbach somewhat in terms of its sub-catchment area;

Water quality

The water quality in the upper reaches between the source and the Hasenbrünnele (near the confluence of the Sperberklinge) is classified as low pollution with water quality classes I-II. Between Lindental and Lindenbachsee, the Lindenbach has quality class II (moderately polluted). From there it is categorized in quality class II-III (critically polluted) due to the partial pollution from the mixed water sewer system up to the city limits. Around 60 percent of the water is classified as near-natural.

Individual evidence

LUBW

Official online waterway map with a suitable section and the layers used here: Course and catchment area of ​​the Lindenbach
General introduction without default settings and layers: State Institute for the Environment Baden-Württemberg (LUBW) ( notes )

  1. a b c Height according to the contour line image on the background layer topographic map .
  2. Length according to the waterway network layer ( AWGN ) .
  3. ↑ Catchment area summed up from the sub-catchment areas according to the basic catchment area layer (AWGN) .
  4. a b Lake area according to the layer standing waters .

Other evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich Huttenlocher , Hansjörg Dongus : Geographical land survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 170 Stuttgart. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1949, revised 1967. →  Online map (PDF; 4.0 MB)
  2. Page on Lindenbachsee at www.weilimdorf.de
  3. ^ State capital Stuttgart, Water report 2003, page 43.
  4. ^ State capital Stuttgart, Water report 2003, page 44.

literature

  • Topographic map 1: 25,000 Baden-Württemberg, as single sheet No. 7120 Stuttgart Northwest and No. 7220 Stuttgart Southwest

Web links