Black talk
Black talk | ||
The Schwarze Laber near Parsberg |
||
Data | ||
Water code | EN : 1398 | |
location | Upper Palatinate (Germany) | |
River system | Danube | |
Drain over | Danube → Black Sea | |
source | in Pilsach -Laaber 49 ° 18 '49 " N , 11 ° 33' 39" O |
|
Source height | 517 m above sea level NHN | |
muzzle | near Sinzing in the Danube Coordinates: 48 ° 59 ′ 46 ″ N , 12 ° 2 ′ 29 ″ E 48 ° 59 ′ 46 ″ N , 12 ° 2 ′ 29 ″ E |
|
Mouth height | 333 m above sea level NHN | |
Height difference | 184 m | |
Bottom slope | 2.4 ‰ | |
length | 77.2 km | |
Outflow at the Deuerling A Eo gauge : 424 km² Location: 16.8 km above the mouth |
NNQ (02/22/1963) MNQ 1955–2006 MQ 1955–2006 Mq 1955–2006 MHQ 1955–2006 HHQ (03/11/1947) |
700 l / s 1.7 m³ / s 3.1 m³ / s 7.3 l / (s km²) 14.8 m³ / s 203 m³ / s |
The Schwarze Laber (also Schwarze Laaber ) is a 77 km long left tributary of the Danube in Bavaria .
Surname
The name Laber possibly goes back to the old word Labera , which means fresh bubbling water, or in Bavarian lap (lazy, slow, lazy) in reference to the slow flow of the water. The Laber got the epithet black because of its low gradient, which is why it often flows very slowly and its water appears dark. It distinguishes them from the White Laber and numerous other rivers with the Laber part of their name.
geography
Laberquelle
The Schwarze Laber rises northeast of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate in Laaber, a district of Pilsach on the European main watershed , from a karst spring . The spring water has a temperature of 8 to 10 ° C all year round. The spring was completely redesigned in 2005 by the landscape conservation association, the municipality of Pilsach and the Regensburg water management authority. Before the renaturation, road sewage flowed into the area of the source.
course
The Schwarze Laber flows from there through the Upper Palatinate Jura to the south and flows into the Danube at Sinzing .
Tributaries
- Lampertshofener Bach (right)
- Mühlbach (left)
- Dürner Bach (right)
- Harenzhofener Bach (right)
- Waldhauser Bach (right)
- Frauenbach (left)
- Kerschbach (right)
- Frauenbach (left)
- Bachmühlbach (right)
Places on the river
- Pilsach- Dietkirchen
- Velburg - Oberweiling - Finsterweiling
- Velburg- Lengenfeld
- Parsberg - Klapfenberg - Darshofen
- Beratzhausen
- Laaber
- Deuerling
- Nittendorf (district of Loch)
- Eichhofen
- Schönhofen
- Sinzing
- Bruckdorf
- Alling
- Sub-book
particularities
The Schwarze Laber only freezes over in particularly severe winters, as it is fed by underground karst springs. The water usually stays fairly constant at around 8 ° C.
literature
- Franz X. Bogner: The black talk from the air. Aerial photo book, Schwarze Laber Foundation, Parsberg 2014, ISBN 978-3-00-047433-0 .
- Franz X. Bogner: In the valley of the Schwarzen Laber. Luftbildband, Pustet, Regensburg 1999, ISBN 3-7917-1673-5 .
- Dietmar Kuffer: Reading book of the Laberjuras. Kallmünz 1994, ISBN 3-7847-1156-1 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Bavaria Atlas of the Bavarian State Government ( notes )
- ^ German Hydrological Yearbook Danube Region 2006 Bavarian State Office for the Environment, p. 149, accessed on October 4, 2017, at: bestellen.bayern.de (PDF, German, 24.2 MB).
- ↑ Germany 1010/2011: ADAC Reise Atlas 1: 200000 © 2009 MairDumont Media, D-73751 Ostfildern (2.)
- ^ Johann Jakob Egli : Nomina geographica. Language and factual explanation of 42,000 geographical names of all regions of the world. , Friedrich Brandstetter, 2nd edition Leipzig 1893, p. 519 (on Laber, Labara, Lebraha and Lapara)