Mainzer Berg (Dieburg)
Mainz mountain | ||
---|---|---|
Mainzer Berg (right) and Tannenkopf (left), view from Rehberg near Roßdorf (2020) |
||
height | 227 m above sea level NHN | |
location | Hessen , Germany | |
Mountains | Odenwald | |
Coordinates | 49 ° 54 ′ 18 ″ N , 8 ° 46 ′ 19 ″ E | |
|
||
rock | Granite - Crystalline Odenwald - Frankenstein Complex | |
Age of the rock | about 360 million years |
The Mainz mountain (also Moret ) is 227 m above sea level. NN high, wooded hill on the district of the southern Hessian city of Dieburg . It represents the highest elevation of the Messel hill country , which geologically is to be regarded as the northernmost part of the Odenwald . The Mainzer Berg is on the L 3094 between Darmstadt and Dieburg, about two kilometers southeast of the Messel pit .
On its top there is a 90.5 meter high telecommunications tower of Deutsche Telekom AG that can be seen from afar, and to the south of it is the Naturfreundehaus on the Moret, which is a popular excursion destination. There is also a quarry of the Odenwälder Hartstein-Industrie (OHI) to the west of the summit .
In 1971 the almost 3 hectare ski and toboggan slope was created. A drag lift was in operation from 1972 to 1984 . The elevator was dismantled because of the increasingly poor snowfall.
Due to bushes on the north side, the ski and toboggan slope is a bit smaller today.
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ In 1310 Dieburg became completely Electoral Mainz
- ↑ Patzwald type towers FMT 10
- ↑ Michael Prasch in: Darmstädter Echo, Friday, March 23, 2018, p. 24.