Schwarzleite
Schwarzleite | ||
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height | 481 m above sea level NHN | |
location | near Pleinfeld and St. Veit ; Weissenburg-Gunzenhausen district , Bavaria ( Germany ) | |
Coordinates | 49 ° 6 '42 " N , 10 ° 57' 28" E | |
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The Schwarzleite is 481 m above sea level. NHN high, wooded ridge in the central Franconian district of Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen between the Great Brombachsee in the north, Ramsberg in the west, St. Veit in the south and Pleinfeld in the east. The mountain, together with its forest area, was a community-free area until the municipal reform in Bavaria .
geography
location
The wooded ridge is located in the northeast of the Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen district not far to the west of some Pleinfeld residential areas, sports fields and a camping site. In the north, the mountain falls into the valley of the Brombach , which has been occupied by the Great Brombachsee since the 1990s as part of the Franconian Lake District project . St. Veit and the Gunzenhausen – Pleinfeld railway line lie south of the mountain , where the terrain slopes down into the depression of the Banzerbach stream . In the west rises the vineyard , the local mountain of the place Ramsberg. Several hiking and cycling trails lead through the forest.
Natural allocation
The Schwarzleite belongs in the natural spatial main unit group Franconian Keuper-Lias-Land (No. 11), in the main unit Middle Franconian Basin (113) and in the sub-unit Southern Middle Franconian Plates (113.3) to the natural area of the southern foreland of the Spalter Hügelland (113.33).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
- ^ Official register of places for Bavaria. Territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census. Munich (Contributions to Statistics Bavaria 260), 1964, column 832
- ↑ Topographical Maps , BayernAtlas , Bavarian Surveying Administration
- ^ Franz Tichy: Geographical Land Survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 163 Nuremberg. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1973. → Online map (PDF; 4.0 MB)